The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 14, 1891, Image 6

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A FADED VIOLET.
THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH.
Phat thought is folded in thy lea es!
What tend or thought, what speechless pala!
f hol thy faded lips to mine,
Thou darling of the April ratnl
{hold thy faded lips to mine,
le fn, and azure tint are fled
P dry, mute lips! ye are the type
Of somethihg in me cold and dead.
Pf something wilted like thy leaves,
Of fragrance flown, ct bezuty dim;
Yet, tor the love of thease white hands
That found thee Ly a river's brim
That found thee waen thy dewy moute
Was purple as with stains of wine
For love of her who love forgot,
I hold thy faded lips to mine!
That tou should’'st live when 1 am dead,
When hate is dead for me, and wrong,
For this, I use my subtlest art, i
For tals, 1 fold thee in my song.
sms impos A A. AIAN SA i
MISS BABY'S NEW SHOES. |
BY JESSIE PP. ARMBTRONG.
“The fact 18, Miss Baby," said nurse,
yon got out of bed the wrong side this
morning; yon have been cross ail day.”
“J didn’t getted out ata l,” answered
Miss Baby, ‘‘you took me out your
owprelf, nurse. And O, do put on my |
pew shes, because they are so pretty!” |
‘No, you cannot wear them to-day,
#0 it is no use to ask. Here are your
other shoes; try to put thew on your-
solf while I go and dress.” And nurse
put down a nice little thick pair of
shoes by Miss Baby, who sat on the
floor pouting.
Then nurses went into the next room,
and baby, who was dressed to go out,
looked around. Opposite to her was a
wardrobe, and through its open door
baby could see the now shoes.
They had been bought for her birth- |
day party the week before the day she
was five years old—very pretty little
bronze shoes they were and Miss Bay
was rather proud of them. She looked
at them, and then in two minutes they
were on baby's little feet, and these
very soon carried Miss Baby hers
into the garden, She was tired of wait-
ing Nurse was so long dressing. And
she roulidl hear music, and wanted to
know what it was. And also, deep in
her little mind, baby had an idea that
if she could get the start of nurse, and
wait for her in the garden, she would
never know that she hal on her new
shoes,
A hittlo black-oyed boy with a violin,
was looking throngh the garden gate,
snd when he saw Miss Baby coming he
laughed and nodded to her in the most
friendly manner, as he played.
Scon nurse, who was still in her bed- |
recom, heard such merry sounds coming
from the arden that she quickly wnt
to the window to see what was goiug
on.
“Surely that is Miss Baby's voice!” |
she said to hersel!; “how naughty of
ber to run out alone!”
Now nurse was rather a “‘slow-coach”
It took her a long time to put on her |
jacket and bonnet; and then she gener- |
ally found she had buttoned her jacket
wrong, and she had to nndo it, and do
it all again, So she had plenty of time
to watch baby and the little violin boy,
as the stood dressing at the window,
And this is what she saw,
First of all baby stood at a little dis-
tance from the gate, shyly lanching at
the little musician, as be sang his mer-
ry song, rolling his black eyes and toss-
ing his black curls. Then litle
irl drew nearer to the gate, and stood,
paling time with one tiny At
last the boy began to dance with his
little bare feet, and nurse heari a
shriek of delighted laughter from Miss
Baby, and then she saw her open t
gato and drag the boy into the garden.
“0, Miss Baby!” amed
“Yon nanghty child! How dare ve
Quickly ste finished buttoning
i
the
100t,
SCT nurs,
wm?”
or
jacket—all wrong—for the third t me,
hastily she eaught up her garden hat
and put it on, wrong side belore. Down
the staircase and through the ha!l went
nurse, really in a hurry for once. When
sho reached the children on the lawn
she eonld hardly believe her eyes, At
first she was too amazed and shocked
to speak.
The little Italian boy sat on the grass
frying to force a grimy, bare foot int,
one of baby's bronze shoes, and baby,
deeply iuteresied and unaware of
nurse s approach, stood watching him,
with the other shoe ready in her hand,
In another momont nurse had joined
the pair.
Then there was such a noise as is not
often heard anywhere but in the par-
rot-house at the Zoological Gardens
Miss Baby's mamma heard it, and came
ranuing from the house, wondering
wht it could mean.
There stood the litle Italian, rub
bing a dirty little fist 1.to each eye,
sud shrieking shrilly at the top of his
voiee, Nurse, with a face like a tur-
key-cock, was talking loud and fast, as
she chook her finger at the boy and
threatened him with the dog and a
policeman, and Miss Baby, screaming
and stamping in a passion of rage, was |
beating nurse with the **Grannie’ bon-
net she had spatched from her head for !
the purpose. ;
, baby, baby! What is the mat- |
ter?” cried mamma, as she came np, |
“He—he—hbadn’t gotted any shoes
and so-—1 gaved—I[ gaved him mine!’
sobbed baby. i
“Well, well, darling, but yon must |
not beat poor nurse. Come, leave off
erying, and tell me why nurse is angry
and why that little boy is crying?”
Then mamma sat down and took baby |
um her lap, snd Shits nurse put on her
she an o little gir ether |
told her all about it. pe foe
“But he 18 a pooe little boy, and 1
wanted to give
baby, dolefully. {
“Well, darking, I am glad you are
surry for the little boy, but your shoes
will not fit him, he shall have some
others. Go upstairs, please, nurse, and |
bring down an old pair of Master Har- |
old's; they will fit hin, 1 should think.” i
Nurse went away,
mother told her that she must tell nurse |
she was sorry that she had put on her
best shoes when she bad told her not to
dows; and that she ought not to give
iu of her clothes sway without
ve.
g
‘“‘Are yon angry, mamma?’ asked
baby, tearfully.
“No, dear; 1 am not angry now I see
you are sorry. It ulways makes moth- |
ervery orry when baby is disobedient |
and passionate; but 1 alway. love you,
durling, even when you are nanghty.”
Baby was «ilent for a few minutes,
then she asked:
“And does God, too?”
“Yes, my darling; God loves us al-
ways, eveu when we are nanghty. And!
because he loves us 80 much we cught |
so? Because it makes him so sorry to |
sve us naughty.”
“Yes, mamma.” said baby.
And then nurse came back with |
brother Harold's she and baby gave
them to the little Italian boy, who by
this time had stopped crying.
**These are bizger.” ste said to him,
and your feet will go into the~e because
they are brother Harold's, and Harold
is a big boy!” |
Then they made the child sit down |
on the grass and put on the shoes, |
which really did fit. And then baby's
mother gave him sixpence, and Miss
Baby picked a flower and gave it to |
ing her mother's hand and smiling at |
the little boy as he walked away nod-
tucied under his arm,
“And he never once said “Thank
you!"" remarked nurse.
“But he looked it,” said mamma,
“Aud now, dear, yon must go back |
into the house and have another pair of
shoes put on.” |
“Yes, mamma, I will,” said Miss Ba- |
by; “and 1 am sorry, nurse; and I feel
“Hom!” suid nurse, “I hope it will
last !"
DEC(
It is always extremely pleasant to |
have some kind of fancy work which |
will oecupy but a small space tll it is |
nearly completed, snd which can be |
done by piecemeal. For such a pur-
pose we know of nothing prettier or |
more s:tisfactory than a cover for al
bod. Very beautiful ones may be made
of alternate squares of linen and fine
erochet, which work is again becoming |
very fashionable,
Many of these crochet patterns re- |
wanble old guipure and Venetian laces,
and although they require patience
snd perseverance till the pattern is
learned, still they amply repay one for
the t. me and effort expended. Some of
the delicate cambrie or linen d'ovlevs, |
which can be bought ready finished
with hew-stitched edges and a pretty |
design traced in the centre, are very
suitable to nse for the linen squares,
The designs may be worked with wash-
filoselles or with v ry fine flax thread.
Shades of gold on white are most ex-
quisite and a very desirable change |
from the reds and navy blues which |
have so long reign-d; supreme. The
edge of these spreads should be fimsh-
ed with a crochet lace or torehon lace; |
JRATIV E WORK,
od squares,
It is a well-known fact that German
ladies excel all others in the art of |
cross-stitch embroidery, and having
had the opportunity of seeing a great |
deal of their work 1 ean fully indorse
statement. A beantiful spread |
moments, consisted of strips of light
ercam-colored canvas, embroidered in |
shades of bine, and set together with
strips of Russian lace insertion. The
spread was then lined with bine silk |
and finished with a flounce of Russian |
edging-lace abont eight inches deep. |
It 18 really necessary to see this work |
belore one ean be convinced of its ex- |
ceding great beanty.,
A very popular style of decoration in !
fancy work at pres nt is one « xtremely
simple and easy of execution. This is
ell d wafer work and is done in chain
stitch upon a linea or serge foundation,
These wafers are commenced in the
centre, and are worked in eularging |
circkes, round and round, until they
are about the size of a twenty-five cent |
piece. Bomelimes five or six rows are
placed round the edge of a tea-cloth or
# spread, the wafers in each row being
8 trifle smaller than those in the pre-
ceding row, till the sma lest are only
the s zo of small peas. With the help
of a little artistic talent a great variety
can be given to their arrangement.
With a silk or satin foundation, added
beauty is given to the wafers if they
are made of strands of gold thread
placed as closely together as possible
and fastencd with the finest of strong,
yellow silk.
With the great variety of materials
and the vast number of beautiful pat-
terns which can now be found in every
art store, no woman or girl need be
without a bit of fancy work, no matter
how simple, with which to occupy the
lew spare moments whieh come to
nearly all; and till one has tried to save
these spare moments she does not know
how many little articles, which tend to
the result of her efforts. Ena,
The Traveled Alphabet.
Numbered with amusements for
evening hours, suggested by Good
Housekeeping, is the “Traveled Alpha-
bet.” This game sufficiently taxes the
ingentity to make it quite as suitable
for the older as the younger people,
Deciding on the person with whom the
alphabet should begin, esch one must
take a loiter in tarn and apply it to the
country to which he or w" is going,
and the object of the journey, :
No. 1. am going to Africa to
Ants and Arnconds gat
No. 2. 1 journey to Brooklyn t
Brosd and Poot y ogitiyn to aut
No. 3. I travel to Cleveland to get a
No. 4. 1am to De
tain Danitaljondoind to Denver to ob.
No. bh 1 to BE
0.5. Tjourney to Egypt to Bat
n
his should be continued nasil
alphabet is exhausted. Any ae
fn ling to comply must pay the forfeit
new game,
story.
mth ——
ns ATi
Railroad Haman Nature.
Now and then one finds a person who
exhibited by the gatemeu in the depots.
There orders are to pass no one in
thing in the world for them to wave
back old age, youth, beauty, sud any-
a friend expected on that train. One
of the surliest officials | every saw has
agate in the L. & N. depot in Cin
stiflly away from desperate men, weep-
ing women, and howiing children. To
every protestation he had but one ane
swer:
“Can't pass 'thout a ticket.”
The other day while I was watching
him a little
gates, Of the two tenders she selected
this one to operate on, although any-
one could have seen that the other had
the biggest heart. After several peo
ple had been turned away she slid for-
ward in a graceful way and inquired:
to the President of the road.”
“N—o, ma'am!” he stammered,
thrown on his beam ends by the query.
“Ah! you loek so much like him.
Are you the superintendent?”
“No, ma'am-—not exactly.”
*I'hen you must be the manager?”
“Hardly, ma'am.”
‘Dear me! but how could the people
be so mistaken?” she went on. “Half
a dozen of them said you were one of
pointed to tind you are not. Perhaps,
though, you have the general mana
ger's powers when he is not here.”
“What is it, ma'am?"
“My sister will be in on the 6:30, and
I so want to go inside the gates and
help her with the children. As you
must have the authority of the manager
in his absence, I make bold to"
“Certainly, ma'am; walk righs
he interrupted.
“You are so kind.”
“Don't mention it"
“But all leading railroad
bit of tally, and then she made a beeline
down the depot.
“We turned to look at the gateman,
and the change was surpr He
or
SDRAM.
e
creased by four inches, his chest was
thrown out, and he was
2K x
the stufling out of if
come off the perch.
of all had found his weak spot.—2¥, I.
TR
im he
Aristocratic Carriage.
Women who wish to preserve the
limness and contour of their figure
must begin by learning to stand well,
‘hat is explained to mean
upward of
flattening of the back, with
the shoulder-blades held in their proper
places, and the definite curving in the
small of the back, thus throwing the
whole weight of the body upon the
hips. No other women hold themselves
so well as the aristocratic English-
women. Much of their beauty lies in
ness of their figures, and the fine poise
The same aristocratic carriage is
within reach of any American girl who
it is only
the question of a few years of external
vigilance, never relaxing her watch-
herself; and, sitting, or
standing, always preserving her erect.
ness and pose, the result being that at
the end of that time it has become sec
ond nature to her, and loses
it. This in a great measure preserves
ire, because it keeps the muscles
strung, oo. prevents the
flesh around the
SO Dever
tm and well
sinking down of the
Another thing to avoid isa
bad habit of going up-stairs, which
most women do, bent forward with the
chest contracted, which, as well as an
idolent, slouchy manner of walking, is
injurious to the heart and lungs.
Augusta's Beantiful Shoulders.
The Empress Augusta was famouns in
her younger days for her personal
beauty anc
cent shoulders. In the later years of
her life her beauty of feature had quite
disappeared, but to the day of her
death the wonderful shoulders re.
mained the same. And court gossip
tells the following story about it: The
Empress has always been excessively
proud of her beauty, and so, when the
unkind years began to leave their trace
upon her, she devised the most skillful
aids from art. For her neck and
shoulders-—indeed, for the entire upper
body-—she had a waxen covering made
which perfectly simulated nature in
coloring, texture and outline. This
armor once assumed, she was never
known to remove it, and indeed for
many years the fact of its being the
proddet of art was a matter of suspicion
rather than actual knowledge. Cer.
tainty came about in this way. One
of the young women of the court of an
experimental turn of mind slipped sly-
X up behind the presence one
ay and gave just the tiniest touch of a
needle on the smooth white shoulders.
The Empress did not stir. She pushed
a little harder, still the Empress did
uot wince, and court speculation was
silenced forever.—N. ¥. Sun.
Seoretary Biaine speuas an hour or
two a day on literary work. He is en.
gaged upon some historical treatise
the Suisject of which is not known. Mr.
Blaine beer much pleased at the
success of his book, * ity Joss
Congress,” and longs for
a np
Fe
elif irinf
A MOTHER'S LOVE,
The Peor Negreas Who Perjured Mersell
i to Save Fier Sen's Life.
ir party recently by a lawyer in
| whose practice the incident had oc
curred, says the N. Y. Evening Sun:
i slaves a young mulatto, owned by a
: of auger struck and killed his master’s
son, who was also his own half-brother,
| the deed was discovered and made his
lost.
As poon as she was freed the unhap-
py mother followed northward, dee
tshe would find her son if he was si~]
alive, for he was all she had
world. Year after year she drifted
| vaguely from place to place, providing
| for her wants g
| Iaundress and never resting from her
efforts to find her boy. She had been
| & comely young woman in her early
heart had made her old st 40, and at
50 she was bowed and wrinkled like a
woman at three score and ten.
One day a summons came to her
from an adjoining state, a fearful
{ legal document which she did not com-
! prehend, but which she understood in
some vague way to be connected with
the welfare of her child. In her per-
plexity she sought out this lawyer and
| told him the story of her life. Inquiry
showed that she had been summon
to prove the identity of a erime-hay
ened negro who was under trial in a
{ neighboring state on a grave charge.
A curious train of evideuce had re-
| vealed much of the early life of the
| eriminal, and had fastened upon him
| the suspicion of being the negro who
| had so many years before killed his
master's son in South Carelina. The
question rested upon the testimony of
tho aged negress as to whether or not
this was the man.
She was brought into court. Before
her was the strange and imposing ar-
{ ray of court officials; the solemn nature
| of the oath was carefully explained 14
{ her and she was then sworn
“the truth, the whole truth, snd
he truth.” The
life was drawn out by skillful
| ing, and then the prisoner was brougi
before her. aad son
again face to face; he with all
on his
wi
i ing but t story
quest
it
Mother stood
the sins
tof a criminal’'s life shoulders,
and sbe bound
oy al was y her
! devout soul ti
y
e strongest vow a human
being can make, to speak the we
that should send his guilty (
punishment. She gave one deve
look at the slouching figure and hand
ened face before her. iH the hunger
{ of her life appeared in her eyes. Thea
. she raised her bent frame to its fullest
| height, and, lifting her right hand
looked calmly the judge and law-
| yers. “Befo' heaven, |
said, ‘dat | nebber saw dis boy befo
She had saved him from the gallows,
but he was sentenced to serve a term in
the peoitentiary for the charge oun
{ which he was originally arrested.
| But it cost her own lemorse
and terror for the not-to-be-forgiven
i sin which she believed herself to have
{ committed to with the deep
| wound which heart had received
| after the hope of 80 many years wers
{ loads 100 heavy for the tired soul, and
| in a few mouths the frail body was
buried the potter's field with the
[lawyer as the only mouruer.
a
ii
53
»
$
at
SWEeaArs, the
life.
gether
wer
in
love-makis
{ Aage really me
{| Murray's Magazine, A young girl
into a theatre (o play :
i She stands in the w
ingenue
ed upon the = } he sees a man
i and a woman making love. The man
says, “Dearest. fly with me.” The wo-
man savs, wt." The man savs,
{ “We will go 3 come.” The &
| time such words as those fall on the
| ears of a young girl unaccustomed 1
hear them they might, if said with fer-
vor and passion, mean something, but
this is the way it generally goes:
“Dearest, fly with me.”
“No, no, no!” from the stage mana-
LP
is
ow
against yon. Now, try it."
at last the idea of “Fly with me,” as
be of a most appalling Kind. The gen-
tieman has ha
talked over.
voice, he has tried it in a low voice,
it in a heavy voice, until thers is no
sense left of what “Fly with me” might
the romance of love-making is ne,
Therefore, what effect can it have? In
love is it not the fact that some of the
Shatin lies in treating of an uskoowon
Old Chairs.
Two chairs that have been handed
down four generations go to help out
on the furniture used in the late Abram
Sampson's house in Coleman, Mioh.
Tho oldest one was bought in Boston,
Mass. in F743,and | has now Taste ie
0 years.
Fe a on parrel 1a the house that
was bought in New York in 1839, has
been in twelve different states, and is
good for twelve more.
is
!
ir
f
g
IL RA es
A Diabolical Time-Plece.
It Is said that one ean have too mneh
of a good thing. Tom Edison is a good
thing; ergo, one ean have too wmuch of
Tom, or rather too much of the fruit
Mr. Edi.
One
way to Bt. Paul. The startling possi-
to be diabolical, It is a talking instead
When itis 1, 2 or
Edison's invention comes
right out wud tells you so to your face,
aud when it is high or low 12, the me-
chanical fiend jumps into you with an
extenmporaneotis lecture on the waste
ethics of
on the lark,
temember these are
They can be varied
each day according to the satirical flu.
wife, There is a
and export beer.
hew-gag exhaust and tom-tom escape-
Just here is where lurks the
danger. While a man is down-town
writer, bis wife at home can be wind.
What if the man does
telephone that he can’t come up to din-
ner? The patient clock runs right
along, giving out monosyllables and
civility to rest of the family,
with its big storage battery of eans-
tie invective bottled expressly for his
own private use—sometning like this
“Ah, there, Flinsflam, it is now 31
o'clock a. m. Nice time to crawl home
to the house where yourlove lies dream.
What's the
matter with goin when whi
1 # iy #
8 10 use to put up the oid
the
ing the weary hours away!
& 10 roost le
folks do? It
club and lodge
ut of balance is,
Where did you get that hat, and whos
is it? Mot to
stay three weeks. see
for herself if th ngs are
been represeated. Ye
that is fairer t! hi
room ches
aikn, a
# coming Lo-morrow
Ww als io
as ad as
5, there's a land
whers |
lias
land
pa You are en
aonieer 1'ress,
-
THREE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS.
a
Curious Calenlations Ceneerning This
Enormons Sam of Money.
“The Van-
‘niated to |
Wu)"
ards {old
ow»
“Of cour-e
ed his pape snd, leani:
ack in the chair, col i
I do not know whether that statement
is true; but | saw it published in the
&0 epormons that
leniating the
oportions of that number of
lars. Here is a little slip in
my wallet bere that may give you some
idea. If Adam, when he first
und in the
“The sum seemed
I spent quite a while in o
physical
gilver do
: i
0K eq
Garden SaY
id not to-day Lave
iry to
ver dollars
transport
it would
each of a ca-
If these cars
it would be
it were
possible for 300,000,000 silver dollars
to be laid on the ground in a straight
line, with edges touching each other
DEOPER
“
¢ s ov §s v %
eight cars,
tons,
train
farther than from London across the
Atlantic Ocean and over the North
American Continent to San Francisco.
A sidewalk of three hundred million
silver dollars could be laid six feet wide
and more than fifteen miles long. If
three hundred million dollars were laid
oue on top of the other they would
make a column 475 miles high. If
taken down and arranged in the form
of a cube each side of the latter would
would weigh more than 10,000 tons. If
such a weight were dropped from the
that
ess.
would be great enough to desire
part of the city." —Fhi ;
A Daniel has come to judgment in
Montreal, where a man has been cone
demned to pay the sum of $1 as dam-
for havirg ealied upon a person in
a factory with a view to coliveting a
debt, court held that the domicile
of the debtor is the proper place at
which to demand money owing.
It is further declared that to ask om
the street for mouey that is due coa- |
stitutes an assault. i
Collis P. Huntington is prepariag
to erect a palatial mansion of gravite in
New York, Few millivuaires can afford
two such expensive luxuries as a genus |
ine German Prince and a New Xotk '
RASA SOL is
It doesn’t pay to cry over spilled iik,
By judiciously watering what you have
left in the can fnstead, you sometimes
hae 84 Much a8 you had before the ac-
H , an ish woman,
pg of ok on
has p' or ag
unselfish
¥OOD FOR THOUGHT.
4
Pe regvl ir in your habits,
Pedigree is not everything.
Conlentme: is mere instinet,
Fly pleasure and it will follow you.
Coutinue to keep the brain active,
Bad trees are only good to burn.
A pig pen i+» poor diamond markets
Adversity 1s a goddess with frogea
smilies.
Love is the offspring of chance, fis
pure is habit,
Men are belpfai through the intellect
and the afl. ctions,
The only real kings are those who rule
themselves,
No man can judge right whose stand-
ard 1s wrong.
Our highest joy comes when others re-
Joice with us.
It takes something more than wool to
mike a sheep,
A better thing than being a glans 1s
to be a giant killer.
~~ Youmust have interesting occupation
in vigorous old age,
Fruderce in a woman should be an ine
stinct, not a virtue,
Marrying to suit other folks is the
prudery of politeness,
The reason wy a cow wears horns Is
because she’s got two,
The wan who knows one thing well
can write his . ame on marble,
Discontent is the want of self-relianess
it is infirmity of will,
The higher you raise a little man the
more he slirinks,
The most dangerous place in which
to be, is tu be ul pe,
Noman can ever be rich whose happi-
neas depends on money,
The strongest man on earth isthe cose
! 3:8 control himself,
never thinks is a man
rd destraction,
: 35 be proud than it does
s¢ put together,
pportunities, bud
make them,
has in his heart
: his head,
wish, and he that
wil die fasting.
for some folks,
made for faskion.
to ve laughed at for
thelr folly.
religion is only a
gale of a palace,
There is a variety of work to be done,
and every varely of talent to do it.
Friends get on r when eack is
willing to “come off ’ a little bit,
Everythirg that is nice grows on the
other side of a bart ed wire fence.
“Charity begins at home,” but that
is no excuse for letting it end there,
Tbe Lord i: tended women to be good,
The devil 1s content if they are pretty.
There 13 no success without yon work
for it. You canuot extemporize sue-
CUS8,
Use Time well, and you will get more
{from his band than be will take from
yours,
An Englishman correc's his mistakes
bef re hu them: a Yankee after
wards,
Many people spend thelr time trying
: Lie hole where sin got into this
Or ¢
A
a
made
aie
t
y
amp on the oule
Delt
HiaKes
ousanl times harder to be
ricoes than it is without
The man who has the courage to ad-
that be has been in the wrong is not
A pledge that will save in every part
of the globe, if E=pt: “1 will be true to
the trath.”
he best way to rid of your own
troubles, is to get interested in those of
other people
If you can’t find a hot iron to strike,
sinke hard enough and often enough to
make the iron Lot.
A man may have a grand motive and
yet never accomplish much, through
lack of perseverauce.
The man whose neighbors think be is
almost doubts it himself,
Our eyes are pur in front, like the en
gine’s light, *0 we can see the track
alead,
Practice in life whatever you pray
for snd God will give it to you more
avundantly,
A man asks a woman's love before he
marries her; after marriage he demands
her gratitude,
Ho who cannot hold his peace till the
true time comes for acting and speaking
We know what the 1 who never
thinks talks about, ow we would
like to find out what the girl who never
talks thinks about.
Al good zien 10 hil world have the
same k religion; it the
dead frauds and roo,
religion ¢
1f a man could live a thousand years
be wonld proba; spend the last fifty
fretting over wht he could have done
in the previous wasted time
The man who takes the most
is sure to fecl the keenest pain when he
S608 0 many above him.
It 18 the every<iay cares and doties
of life that keep a many
from making fools ey People
If you can’t have a deal of
forbearance will esol to Yom,
smooth your pathway than lots of