The Baby Sorceress, My baby sits beneath the tall elm trees, A wreath of tangled ribbons in her hands; Bhe twines and twists the many-colored strands A little sorceress, weaving destinies, Now the pure white she grasps; now naughs can please But strips of erimson, lurid as the brand From passion’s fires; or yellow, like the sands That lend soft selting to the azure seas, And =o with sweet, incessant toil s A still he fills summer hour, fancies HOW, Till through my heart a sudden terror hay following thrills Yost, as she weaves, aimless choice prove trae. Thank God! our fates procead not wills; The Powerthat spins the thread shalib the hue. WwW from our lond we ThOBIGS Higginson, A—— A Night Watch Slowly the silver twilight sailed Beyond the purple bars: And now the lonely lakelet Its mirror to the stars, All round th No insect Ls No ripp No murmur holds we wood-encompassad shore a n O HD X a on i le on the ¢ Far down the dim 1 Saffusing atn Orion drops his flor Great Jupiter his & a. 3 Along the darkly woodad cape Black olifh wdow hes The near Against the Above th beased to beat, Ww hose tl 2 ¥ How fast y I How noislessly the By day The 1 With al And al I listen till the sileno What is the The thu The A080 With he The orb has s Upon her fear head Oh Whe Eternity re 1s THE MISES ING r WIT Sr si Yay SCarcesy the fu Wal Ww rid a ara a and he had bes tains to whon vices, as not for a sailor's money left, and dering intending, n y turned, to ship aboard of her His mind ha veake fused by his ills knew that for and following tl had been in fully twenty not possibly 82 to whom he h: question made and who { ntly robust ad a little 0 wan- aimless untry, bia re- again. and con- although | e ha ud Mi sp ken on the had been, day in been interviewed foreign information as Tif jnirie 8 many per SONS remembered “the chap,” but no accurate to dates was fortheoming, As the tes- timony of a person wh d extended her hospitality to him, “either of a Tuesday or a Thursday, could rightly say which,” wonld unfor- tunately, carry much weight ina court of justice, I had to trust fx r a defense to the tion the wit. nesses, for veracity I hoped, management of the usual forensic weapons, to compel them to annihilate with their own lips. I much regretted this want of e as I was strong- ly prepossessed in favor of the pris- Bie 4 no, CIOSE- xainiz 1 whose charac by judicion i of i ter vidence, his face making it difficult believe him guilty of the cowardly crime of which he was accused. DBe- sides, it was, as 1 have said, my first important case, and self-interest me to desire its successful issue. of this I had little hope. I laid aside my brief at length and went up to the drawing-room. where I was greeted by my cousin and hostess with a somewhat petulant re- proof for having those musty law papers, Alice and I had been children to- we had grown friends, and since her marriage house in Carrigarvan had been resting-place in assize times. I wasat her vexation a was somewhat ot a matchmaker, and having no one but myself on whom to exercise her talents, she had devoted them exclusively to my service. Bhe had already decided on a suitable wife for me, and was excrting herself to the utmost to bring about the mar- riage. The chosen young lady was present, and I knew that ~ Alice was much annoyed with me for devoting the evening to my brief instead of to A —— admin wrr—— ‘RED KURTZ VOLUME XV. « Hditor and HALL, CENTRE CO., PA., 16, 1882 NUMBER 46. Dora Lyne i 4 Lo 1a iv 3 she Kno s13 Lad § MLE TaN whoever she or he minted up,” 1 time. This is rial is fixed for Morrison's is answered. “ You as to the pa- SO, the less morning found me at On explaining my was referred to the clerk in he library department, from failed to obtain the re- i The young man 1 to that part of iil LETRRIREN OO 1 intim ate d with what appeared to me, at the time, most praiseworthy self-control, that next we k would not lo, giving a partial explanation of the ircumstances. But the clerk, although | Ip me, pro- willing to help able to do 850, self “if yon k any sub- I could ir ascertain- ial box kK If you like to ¥ urself, you sed him what bo out at a given time il vou, but as f Outs Of a sp { 3 KNOW an nnpo 0k over s wele our entries for his offer, and spent a y dav in turning over wherein were in- and course of read- ing of the Morrison's. And an unprofitable morning’s work H was, The record was to all appear- kept, and I failed to race the second volume of the “Stones of Venice”, throngh a period longer | than three weeks, during which it had | twice changed hands. | Some hours more spent in hunting up the persons in whose pos-| session it had been for that length of time, neither of wuld give: any information conc ning the An application to Ber imself was equally fruitless. He orem ered that a lady and gentleman whom he had during his wanderings had asked him to to t but he did not know who they nor could he even make it clear where the incident had occurred, I returned home at dinner- Hm e, tired | and baffled, to rej my failure to Alice and her husband, from whom I | received much sympathy but no sug- | gestion of any practical value. I had | given up hope, and was endeavoring | to dismiss the subject from my ages eribed the names subscribers to nee im pe srfec tly were «} ¥ 5 whol ©« sketch nini hi inet sit hem, were, OI hall bell door sounded and a message came up that a person wanted to speak | to Mr. Lestrange. Going down I found | | waiting for me a bright-looking boy, | one of the shop assistants at Mr, Mor- | rison’s, who had been for a short time aiding in my investigation of the en- tries. “I think I have what you want, sir,” | he said, as I entered the room. “It | was in my mind all that day that I had given out that book to some one, 1 couldn’t think who, and a chance word that I heard this evening brought it all back to me like a flash. It was to Mrs. French, of Redcourt, that I gave it, and it must have been on the 5d or 4th of May. Here is the lady's na ne and address, sir ;” and he handed me slip of paper on which was written { “Mrs, French, Redcourt, Kilearran,” It was in Kilcarran or the neighbor- hood that, according to Bernini's own statement, he had spent the day of the and dismissing the lad, the drawings! i he next with Mrs fifteen d the trig wlway galde Ave the egan next morning, an unusually rapid rate n od to me that the ! i p the Prose forth his wisdom a pro it examination ol course in my has £0 wr, In} hem or th themselves, in Ahe unkn Cause My only tanding i p my Speed h 3 ree * the man- { 3 of the a note was ht nded to me: he witness is in the sher- it’s room.” Going into the sheriffs room I found I companied by a strange prisoner's counsel,” as 1 entered, Mr. Lestrange " 1 turned to 16 Was pronounced, | How and DOW, 11 IRY sur Ihe ¥, how- il under- fo em- he sat to hour, aI than an went of they as a for which expressi mong \ would them pi at the end of many for the him. Miss Darcy cert ain as to the date, not been affixed to the drawing { which was produced in court), as her cousin had arrived at Kilearran on the 9th of May, and left on the 11th. Cross-examination failed to cast any doubt on the accuracy of evidence, while her veracity » above suspicion. The jury professed themselves sat- isfied with the evidence, and, decl to hear eounsel for the defense, re uilty.” The prisoner was seized upon by some of his compatriots, who were serving on the mixed umph, somewhat in his prospects, Some months afterward, a man, dy- ing from the effects of a hurt received itiently he away grati- Ave have been if it had with His tude y 1 ate, even was of nrg cours dazed by the change rime of been Se an Italian, and mfficient to his ryman in height and comple xion to account in some de- gree for the mistake of the witnesses As for me, I date the beginning of { both my professional success and of my life's happiness from the day ol self guilty of nini had the £ bore 3.1 bianceg count Annamese Superstitions, The English consul, in his trade re port on Saigon and Cochin China, an interesting account of of the superstitions which prevail in Annam. It is bad luck for a fish to leap on board a boat; the fish must be cut in two and again, half on either The cap- ture of a porpoise is a very bad omen, for he the iggssenger of infernal gods, The eriesof a “ Gecko,” if odd, are lucky; if even, the reverse. A bird gives side, is Halloween, From the earliest times boen trving Lo §s I ryptian Wore stipb of men this festival to Eng came All H: ition 8, before it Hallo and the yup eyed ave were flo i for fu 5 : also sacrificed cali g, throwing a cuj sea, and calling on him to plenty of sea-weed to grounds, In another wy into them their } Od give enrich Scotch trial a girl would go into a barn, holding a winnowing sieve and stand alone, with both pen, to see her fate, The fashion of trying charms is now nearly outgrown among English ing people. [It survives in Americ ans ng Jo irs speak- “30 the ellar stairs back- ' holding a candle and chestnuts,” holding tapers, test of the future, : ties 8 the Ke ttle: In our hempseed,” ro down the « own dav * onl young pe nile apples bel ward They walnut shells” the “three saucer” In some of our Halloween collect old te a mirror “ laun also * pop and boy 5 On i DOOLS, clean vestibules, ringing the door bell and running away. HEALTH HINTS, “Try barley grains or peas roasted advice of Dr. Foold's Monthly. To cure black pepper, put it in a piece of cotton batting d ipped in sweet «oil, and place tie a bandage round the head, and it will give almost instant Dr. Denker, of St. Petersburg, treats | FOR THE LADIES, A New Profession for Wemen, Franklin the llelle in Now visit in the street allowing from noe city sixth {toa long, } slr Hoek ws for the skill of ulty embraci thers of the profi he For many years to o be popularly A%80 r hig fad Irde velopment the results in 1873 of the Bellevue HUTSON, of ant in wore LAs many most liberal one of whom Later on, turn to : Miss Pe under whi has conti ued nd usefulness ul Dean eneour he schol strong sical and Bat the surprised at the efforts, were n hv creased, and, igh first estab- lish ot hited the proportion of those capable of fulfill requirements multiplied, applic ants, who did not nm ] adapted to the work, proved and this topic the rs say that, after their long ex- they have found that the an applicant can be deter- mined only by absolute trial, The nurses the Bellevue school may be divided into two classes: who study the art of nursing with a view to raining a livelihood or sup- porting their families, and those who look forward to a life of ulness among the poor si k All are lodged and boarded free of charge during the two years’ course, and are paid a smal stim monthly, 3 vhile in the school, to act ual necessary ¢ Xpenses; . to avoid all between rich and poor, every nurse is went the in from, RO ient, on nang rience, ness of ily abs 3 at those usef i i i i of death, in fact, This is re- garded as infelicitous, for some birds of the country only cry at night, and all night, rat announces visits, at noon foretells that the daughters of age is interdicted Sacrifices of pigs are with a document should be, ex- some districts, made at least yearly, which is, or him the previous year; if the tiger omits this, it is a bad lookout for the village, predestination, so it does not matter much. The water buffalois an imagin- in rivers, and only coming on shore at night ; for all that, he is patent enough in the district, and uncomfortably curious toward Euro- peans, The Annamese have several kinds of talking birds—commonly a starling or a raven, which looks after the property while the master is absent, a laxative, and when its operation has acidulated parts every two hours. His method is very successful, Obstinate cases of rheumatism have seen cured by the use of the following: Take every night, till the leaves you, two teaspoonfuls of gum- water, person, quantity. It acts as a powerful stim- Fashion Notes, Roman striped silks are used for full- | dress occasions, Langtry bonnets, pers are the rage. (Gilt and amber beads border new French hats and bonnets, Collars and euffs of ficelle lace are in high favor, as they look well and never wear out, Crochet buttons never go out fashion, but fancy netal and composi- tion buttons are in high faver. Drap d'ete and Henrietta cloth are used for handsome and dressy suits, gloves and slip- | ing. Ruby, very dark plum color, and vogue for velvet costumes for the If the limbs are affected by it soned with cayenne pep- i ——————— From Hand fo Mouth, “What a well remarked White underskirts are completely superseded nowadays by colored flannel balmorals and petticoats of colored quilted satin. A plain, well-finished black cashmere waist of any color makes the best 5 preferred, or black, gant turnout dashed down Austin avenue, “ Yes, but he just lives from hand to returns. business is then in hand must be re- | nounced. As for ghosts and spirits, they abound in Annam-—always, every- robbery. where, and of all descriptions, “ Why, that’s very singular. don’t look as if he was in straitened | circumstances. living from hand to mouth. He is the | leading dentist in the place,” —T'evas Siftings. | Walsts of black or dark-blue jersey with colars and cuffs cashmere, are #0 Plaids of every description—Roman, Tartan, Oriental and Swiss, in every are worn for skirts, with overjackets of velvet or plush in | a monochrome color, Small muffs of dark feathers have two birds’ heads—one head split—for A collar to the left shoulder. When Henrietta cloth and drap i suits by Indies approved trim. embroidery and ringes, mourning the mings are soutaene heavy knotted cord | The platted flounces skirts made for plaiting of terra-cotta or red instead of the fashionable for summer dresses Large elasps of steel or gilt play i great part fushions nowadays Fhey are used to trim dress i and cloaks, hodices tunic ent Lie not in satin inner wherry on black winter have the BLO wile slripes BO in nits, shoes, and to drape 8 Or to ornam siish bow on y back, tha § min do Cashmere remains rial Tot wpular 1a and demi- tle costumes nded are £4 Lars, cutis, nd plastrons of moire, satin or Black and other colored velvet jaque Les r hionable, worn over kirts of differ- ent material and colors, The skirts of are immed around two many f usually enveloped Un 1 § in folds over th eful bow and sas! draped the bac K, One il 18 hats of the i renaux,’” is Of turn- and f the newe st round BEAN in t and one of the mu Is exhibited black velvet, seariet , Of old g bronze. of black and color rd he bat also Vi ivet, In iners wer Ur rivers Inh2 ag Wi art chunk own that in those was known € Coli» Hi the eat- question which GY e conical 1 a foothold in ro intraded, who had vast glittering wroud this nts of the PrOCEss, irdered, i inner re mu far from the Hii Mexicans, supp wind 1 y he the band of Joaquin Murietta, with a large amount { of gold in their poss Lhe | of these unfor ite men ing well- known to the old ents of this lo- i i confirms the fesion 3 in rtially statement, How many “Will-'o-the-wisps” “ wild-goose big deposits without air is teeming with Lake” up riod three years California. under our pr the many “secret mind that has been realized. By 8 unexplained means Dr, Dra- ame acquainted with this legend, yw of thirty years’ be- and in the shape of ve miners followed al termination! The th them from “Gold covering thirty- The one nses” ha SUCCORRIT eh 0H bdr ut CX ditions Hie also hit wid reavement, ntery few was satisfactory, al 81,500 which rionsly ” pt, produced, Six ago, armed scription and map above alluded te, in company with four others, he had no | difficulty in finding the deserted claim and locating the grounds, In lessthan | six days’ work, lowering the ore with { ropes down the mountain side, they have taken from the mine the round sum of £65,000, which the receipts of the San Francisco mint, in Draper's possession, will show, The doctor also informs us that there is at least one hundred tons of rich ore on hand ready for the milling process. This claim will undoubte dly develop the boss bonanza of the State, — Tuolumne (Cal.) Indepe nde nt. and umn, 1 WOCKS we ——— Arabi and Toulba Pasha, As seen in his prison, Arabi Pasha is a man of singularly courteofis man- ners; tall, burly, not uncomely, with a tendency to baldness and snowiness about the beard, He should be a man of fifty-five, but Orientals are inseru- table in the matter of age, some of them looking 100, while in reality they have but just turned thirty, Helis a | fellah of the fellaheen. The shi pe of his eyes and cast of his countenance shows this, He has the ignoranee of the fellah, his boundless trust and | grotesque ly selfish belief that Allah's | time is occupied with specially watch- ing him above all other creatures Previous to the recent Egyptian war no one ever heard of Toulba Pasha, {the Sancho Panza to Arabi’s Don Quixote, his alter ego and the sharer of his captivity. He rose from the dregs of society, is short, dark, corpu- | lent, with twinkling eyes, an impudent | leer, and nervous fat Lands always on the move, He willfully deceived his master, who trusted in him, for, in the telegrams which are extant, he prated | always of great victories and promised { others. Without Toulba's lying, plau- sible counsel it is unlikely that Arabi would ever have succumbed to his rash ambition. He pinned his faith to Toulba, and Toulba, an adventurer, reckless of consequences, led him floundering into the mire, A BRIL LIARY BATTLE, Vivid Desvription of un Action Hetween a Confederate lnm aud several Gunbonts, H. A, Skinner writes as follows Philadelphia Times; On a day in Augast, 1864, the Al commanded by Licutenant Cook, and gecompanied by a small tender carrying extra supplies of am- munition and provisions, made her ap- pearance and started on her cruise through the sounds, The mosquito fleet fled like sheep before her and were soon out of sight beyond Sandy Point, which stretched its long tongue far out from our shore a couple of miles below. Their precipitate flight was only prudent, for their wooden sides could not have stood a moment before the ram, That strange craft, a novel sight to those waters, moved leisurely andsilently on, Rev, in the brilliant bemarle, serving her force for a greater foe, and one which her gallant commander lit- tle dreamed was 80 near, She looked like the four-sided roof of a house sub- merged to the eaves, while a dark line at each end, just above the water, in- dicated her deck fore and aft, her forin- idable iron prow or horn being, of course, wholly under water. The Con- faderate flag th ated from a short staff the forward end of her roof, and idships was =: smokestack, De Of ing objects about her, She carried two very heavy guns, one on each side, and a picked crew of tried men ; but her ports were closed ; men and guns were concealed within her mailed walls, and there was no indication of life about her, except her steady, stealthy motion, and an infrequent cloud of murky smoke from her chimney, as fresh fuel was thrown into her furnaces, a mysterious, almost solemn, object had never been beheld on the fair Al bemarle sound, She had just passed my house, and wits hidden from view by intervening trees, when my ear was startled by the booming of a heavy gun. Hustening to the shore a hundred vards distant, 1 could easily take in the scene, The ram had fired a shot, as the cloud of smoke in her vicinity showed, of de fiance to an approaching enemy, and had taken of unusual size and rig were moving rapidly up the sound, and were just rounding Sandy Point. Hurrying back to the house, I notified my household, already first appearance of the ram, white and black, and all, including several about 300 vards down the and gathered upon a shady view of the about two miles, iy were in full upon the ram, otionless, od, while her tender, a few hundred yards in advances, unarmed and help- awaited certain capture or One, two, three, in single {ile came on the at ships, under furled and They were of light the class known as *double- enders,” and carrying each about ten guns, of which the bow and stern were 100-pounders. a size far beyond any vessels a in our waters before, and as ram seemed but a Any one of the eared large enough aboard and stow her When within about a mile of the ram the foremost ship fired a shot shore, ne at a dist view, moving swiftly which lay sullen and 88, Go struction. tacking with sal decks cleared for a is close tion 3% 5 gunboats BOAO ig were of ever sed rison, three apg ier we saw it richochet far bevond her, she, however, reserved her fire till they were close upon her, when the fight began in earnest, Meanwhile the mos- which had Svinently warned the larger vessels of the pres- ence of the ram and thus hastened the ittack, had now cautiously moved up, and lay in the offing to watch the con. flict, The attacking vessels strictly main. tained their first order. Each in her bow on toward the ram, quito fleet, as she passed to the Ia ivered another broadside d to the starboard. This continued for some time, shot, then del as She re Pass wil Si berations, which waked the echoes and far inland, amid the silent woods and somber Our party gazed with ision and bated breath-—the groaning and shrieking ant that the end of ind But the ram-—what her? lost sieht of her along shore of depths pt Woeoime When the 5 her did not of smoke, which shroud, she was sunk, but the steady, gentle beeeze would sweep aside the smoke, clung to her like a Albemarle still afloat and bravely re- turning the murderous fire of her foes, run her down and sink her by sheer same time their furious cannonade, She was lke by infuriated wasps; unharmed hy their stings, undismayed by their size and buzzing. But the activity of the more easily-hand led gun-boats and the ber, if not i a match for her. Her fire slacken. Then asthe light south wind scattered the smoke clouds over the blue, rippling waters and the august sun shone clear upon the little ram, and her smoke-stack shot away. she kept her position, only firing at longer intervals, of the fight, while the other two, evidently using more caution, retire, pursued by them at long range, the fire which they still kept up. had come One of her | the Roanoke, whence she about five hours before, two guns, sequence of the loss of her chimney it | was impossible to keep up sufficient | steam, In this crippled state she must | make her way back, pursued by two | swift and he: wily armed ships. Her commander proved equal to the emergency. Among her stores was a | large supply of salt pork, This he ordered to be used for fuel instead of | the coal, which was now useless. The fierce heat thus rapidly produced made Cem " ! up for the lack of drag in the fn- | jured sudsestack, and so she steudil spills redreated, fighting all the way wi her remalning gun until she reached the mouth of the river, where she fired the last shot of defiance, as she had fired the fst. The gunbonts kad meanwhile ceased the Jams and the engagement was ended, The erippled double-ended steam ot wily below Handy Point, where she lay “ couple of weeks repairing damages, It leaked out that a solid shot from the ram had gone through her boiler, killing several (of her men and wounding others by its effect, For several weeks the sound shore in the vicinity of the fight was strewn with splinters and other frag- ments, some painted, some carved or gilded, showing the results of the ram's fire upon the wooden hulks of her adversaries, ro A — An Old Triek Revived, While a crowd of men were en gaged recently in contests of skill, in the » hooting gallery on Clinton street, there enters ed a ta¥ and siniste r-looking { stranger, who stood with folded arms watching the marksmen, Pretty soon, { when there was a lull in the shooting, he stepped up to the counter, against which the shooters always stand, and picked up one of the guns, loaded it, laid down a nickel for the shot, and, firing off-] al at the sinallest and most difficult target, hit the bull's-eve with ¢ ge Then he examined the gun losely, and with a sneer asked the prietar why he kept such we | rifles to shoot with, This query net- {tied the boss of the miniature rifle range, and he retorted that they were “good enough guns for any one to shoot with” | “That may be,” responded the seof- fing visitor, “but they are perfect toys, and I would not be afraid to be shot at forty times a day with such old popguns, Why,” and he picked up a cartridge and inserted it in the breach of the rifle he held, “you can't shoot through a sheet of paper with thisand I can hold the ball in the old thing with my finger, It is loaded now as you see and I will put my thumb over the muzzle and your old popgun can't drive the ball out.” The shooting gallery man looked at | plainly said that he thought of calling | the police to take charge of an | lunatic and then there came in his a steely glitter which boded no good : he began to fumble around the | of the rifle, over the muzzle of w i the scoffer held his thumb, “ Pull the trigger if you want to,” urged the stranger, “All right, I'm blamed if 1 don't,” sald the owner of the weapon; “you fellers here are witness that if I blow | his whole hand off it is hisown fault” and he pressed the little curved piece {of iron that released the hammer. There was a very faint and dull re post, totally uniike the sharp, whip- ike crack a rifle exdinarily makes, not a particle of smoke was seen, the stranger's thumb was intact over the muzzle and the bullet was heard to | rattle back in the barrél. The specta- tors stood aghast, and slowly fell back as though the stranger was something uncanny, while the proprietor of the gallery was as pale gs a ghost, “Are |you the devil? he finally gasped, while the stranger smiled, and remov- ing his thumb, turned up the gun, let the bullet roll out on the floor, set it up against the wall and walked out, The stranger had sboply performed | the air to guns, His thumb prevented the air from escaping from the barrel of the weapon, and the air acted as & cushion between the thumb and the bullet.— Fort Wayne Gazelle, Out of the Depths, Mary Jackson entered the Chie police court-room and asked to be sent to the workhouse, Her story as told the court.was a sad one, and we give it here: Do you think, judge, if I had any pl ace to go to thi: it 1 would come here and ask that something be done for me? Do you think I would ask to be judge! 1 have no money, and who will giveme any? Look at me! I | am clothed in rags, and who will give me clothing? I am hungry, who will feed me or give me a home? I am tired, I am forty-seven years of age and can't do as 1 once did. For ten long years I have had no home, and 1 bave done nothing bat make | the same old round from Bucktown to the stationshonde; from the station to this court, to listen to the same old | sentence; from the court-room to the workhouse, {from the workhouse to the whisky shops, back to the station. And so year after year 1 have been Oh ! Tm terribly tired { kept moving. 39 Lof life! Re latives | brothers, but God knows where—I don't. 1 have not seen them for twenty-two long years. Once I was ! somebody—now, as you see, I am no- ‘body. What has brought me to this? Why, drink and bad company. What else ever brings anybody to my con. dition? I was born and raised in Owen county, Ky. In 1861 1 came to Cincinnati, There was plenty of bad company here and I fell into it. Why not go to Kentucky when I get out of the workhouse and find my brothers? | Where in the last ten years was I to find respectable clothing, where was I to get money? Who would give me either? I tell you it has been from one whisky shop to ane | other, then to the station, then ‘to the workhouse, for ten years, and I am getting old. My right name is Ellen Smith, Ob, the workhouseis not so bad a place! 1 have been in | worse, much worse. 1 come before | you in my sober mind, judge, and ask | you to send me there. There is noth- |ing more for me in the world but I am broken down. I can | misery. But once, never be anybody now. judge—once—Il—was—" | Her despondent tone and tearful | face, together with her graphic descrip- tion of her condition, moistened the | eves of many who listened in the sol emn quiet that prevailed in the court room. : “Yours is a sad, sad story, Ellen!” i said Judge Higley, vighiy affected. L4Would the infirmary not be | pe en no «Oh, I would be glad to go there if | they will take me. I am very tired.” The court continued the case with a { firmary, if possible. | More than enelalt of all the | produced in the United States is x. | in New York, California and Wisco sin, The average yield is 23.5 b per acre, and the total reach 45,000,000 bushels. paving tiles, tiles. In
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers