The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, May 09, 1929, Image 2

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    MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1929
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|
MOTHER-MY-LOVE, if you'll give me
your hand, | ti
And go where I ask you to wander,
I will lead you away to a beautiful land— to
The Dreamland that’s waiting out yonder.
We'll walk in a sweet-posie garden out there
Where moonlight and starlight are streaming,
And the flowers and birds are filling the air
i
|
With fragrance and music of dreaming.
There'll be no little tired-out boy to undress,
No questians or cares to perplex you; |
There'll be no little bruises or bumps to caress, |
Nor patching of stockings to vex you.
For I'll rock you away on a silver-dew stream,
And sing you asleep when you're weary, | 1
And no one shall know of our beautiful dream, |
But you and your own little dearie. [ 1
And when I am tired I'll nestle my head
Jn the bosom that’s soothed me so often,
A song which our dreaming shall soften,
|
an
And away through the starlight we’ll wander—
\, Grand Jury Makes S
Li other-My- love - | Report to bee
| leave to submit the following report:
| all the grounds and buildings in connec-
the management and is realized.
The following is the report made by [be
| the May Grand Jury to Judge John A.|maker, who only a few years ago was |
| Berkey, Friday, after making an inspec- | ; Bjack township school boy, has been |
elected president of the recently or-
on of the several county buildings.
Report of Grand Jury: To the Hon- |
rable John A. Berkey President Judge
of the Court of Quarter Sessions of the | Pany-
Peace of Somerset County.
Residents of Somerset county will
| ganized Audio-Vision Appliance com-
Shumaker,
OMERSET COUNTY MAN | Timely Topics from
J
HEADS NEW CONCERN
interested to know that E. E. Shu-
{
Two or three years ago, Mr. |
was elected president of
We, the members of the Grand Jury |the Victor Talking Machine company, |
By the direction of your honorable |
lospital. The County Poor Farm and
ion therewith.
There are about 700 people in the var-
The institution is self-supporting, with-
convened for the regular session of the | with which he became associated Boss)
May term of Court, 1929, hereby beg |as office boy and then, step by step,
rose to the office of chief executive.
; The General Electric Company and
Court this 3rd day of May, 1929 we have | the Westinghouse Electric and Mam
visited the Somerset County Home and ls :
| facturing
manufactured all appliances of the
Radio Corporation of America under
Radio Corporation patents, have for-
jous departments of the institution, in- | med the Audio Vision Appliance Com-
And the wide-awake stars shall sing inmy stead janging the patients indigent en pany as the manufacturing unit of
| prisoners and employees, and absolute y ictor
So Mother-My-Love, let me take your dear | ams and rr is insisted upon by Bs reed Jus Bot DS
Radio Corporation of America.
|
3
Company, which have
Away through the mist to the beautiful land—
The Drea
and that’s waiting out yonder!
—Eugene Field
sa] Bo
eS A ANNE SHRIBLR
bthers’ Virtues
of 11]
whose discipline contributes to the
strengthening and enrichment of char-
acter inevitably produces impairment
out any cost to the taxpayers of Somer-
set County, and nets a fair rate of in-
come on the amount invested, besides
paying all running expenses and caring
for all the inmates. The income is util-
ized from time to time for enlargement
and betterment of the institution.
Thirty four thousand dollars earned by
the institution has already been invested
in the large new building now nearing
E. E. Shumaker, president of the
Victor Talking Machine Company, is
the president of the new company,
which wili have its headquarters in
Camden, N. J.
Another company, the Radio-Victor
the Game Commission
New Educational Feature
The Game Commission recently
purchased a Baloptican for use in con-
tinuously projecting lantern slides.
This equipment will be used at the
various county fairs during the sum-
mer months and will be available for
large conventions of sportsmen and
others interested in wild life activi-
ties during the winter. ‘It is the hope
of the Board to place the machine in
various of the larger railway stations,
method which is employed exten-
sively in Canada in educational work.
About 30,000 Ringneck Eggs
It is the hope of Superintendent
Sines of the Jordan State Game Farm
in Lawrehce County to secure a hatch
of about 30,000 Ringneck Pheasant
eggs this season. Of this number
12,000 will be allotted to the ‘various
game refuges throughout the state;
3,000 will be shipped to the Fisher
Game Farm in Montgomery County;
4,500 will be retained by Mr. Sines at
the Jordan Farm, and the remainder
will be distributed to sportsmen’s as-
sociations , and others interested in
rearing the birds. At present records
would indicate that sufficient applica-
tions from sportsmen and others have
already been received to care for the
Corporation of America, was formed
last week to take over sales activities
|of the merged companies, concentrat-
ing the various functions of the com-
of domestic felicity. -
Mother's Sunday compels us to think
more definitely of those fundamental
things that constitute the strength and
sanctity of home life. It is demon-
strable that the homes of a nation
ut on Record
it Beautiful Descrip
of Wife and Moth-
hood Ever Penned
Found in Book
of Proverbs.
ing it. They either exalt its standards
or debase them. They either con-
tribute to the wholesomeness of our
social life or they gravely impair it.
Indeed the home standards affect for
good or ill every phase of our cor-
porate life. No home liveth to itself.
We are living in an age in which the
duties and privileges of women have
been infinitely broadened. They are
equal sharers with the men of the na-
tion in its large concerns and oppor-
tunities. They have to do with the
making of policies and the shaping of
national ideals. All this should make
t Rev. James E. Freeman.
Bishop of Washington.
tongue is the law of kindness.
bs 31:26.
her tribute to feminine graces
ined in the Bible than that re-
in the thirty-first chapter of
: of Proverbs. It is a glowing
to wifehood and motherhood.
completion.
have the power of making or unmak- 1
a
Much of the work on this
of the rough lumber used in
by indigent inmates who for various
reasons are unable to compete out in
the industrial field.
In the new building now
motion picture exhibits, etc.
building will house the Administrative
in the same.
The pipes conducting the heat to this
new building is being done by prison bined organizations into separate
labor or hy prisoners being sent to units.
serve their sentences there for this| The companies are about to intro-
purpose by Judge John A. Berkey. The duce a new combination radio-talking
institution has its own saw mill where | machine at popular prices.
The Audio Vision Appliance Com-
improvements is cut and sawed. It has pany, a New Jersey corporation, wiil
its own coal mine on the premises, where take over the plants of the Victor
coal is mined in part by prison and part Talking Machine Company in Cam-
den, N. J. :
The board of directors of the new
being | company includes representatives of
completed is a large auditorium arranged | the Radio Corporation, Victor Talking
with a stage for producing plays and for | Machine, General Electric and West-
This inghouse Electric.
In commenting on the new organi-
Heads and the Executive offices will be zation, Mr. Shumaker pointed out the
limitless possibilities of the new com-
remaining eggs. However, the hatch
may be larger than contemplated, and
if the Commission finds they can dis-
tribute additional eggs, this matter
will be given publicity through the lo-
cal newspapers.
Former Refuge Keeper in Charge of
Fisher Game Farm
Mr. Isaac Baumgardner formerly
refuge keeper in charge of State
Game Refuge No. 23 in Huntingdeh
County has moved his headquarters to
the Fisher Game Farm near Sch-
wenksville County, where he will han-
dle propagation activities there. Work
to care for a number of birds this
season.
Game vs. Automobiles
on this farm is progressing rapidly
and sufficient hatching pens, rearing
coops, ete., will be available shortly
Now that the summer season is up-
on us and vacationists will be swarm-
She Was Hunting :
a Hero
By AD SCHUSTER
COLE 0C CC CLC 00 000000900,
(Copyright.)
66] HAVE no objection to your be-
ing * athletic and independent,”
Caroline’s mother spoke slowly, “but
doesn’t it strike you that you are in-
tolerant of those who have other
tastes?”
“Maybe 80,” the girl answered
lightly. “But this I know. I am going
West to the mountains. I am going
to see big strong men who fear noth-
ing and who are of a different breed
than those I have known. I am going
to escape from the sissies and the
highbrows and when I come back I
—well, maybe I will have entirely re-
formed.”
Caroline, in the mountain cabin,
waited for the hero of the open
spaces and the first man she saw,
000 COLES,
0960060000
orial Day To Be
Me
Observed at Somerset
Two programs will be observed in
Somerset on Memorial® Day. At the
Soldier's Monument, the address will be
delivered by Rev. Leonard Hoover, pas-
tor of the Somerset Methodist Episcopal
Church. Music will be furnished by the
Sons of Veterans Drum Corps, and Don
Kimmel’s band. Burgess W. H. Beachy
will be chief marshall of the procession,
which will move to Husband cemetery,
where another schedule has been arrang-
ed in which the high school band with
other organizations will take part.
-_
FIFTEEN MINUTES A DAY DID IT
They grinned when the waiter
spoke to me in Greek, but their laugh-
ter changed to astonishment at my
ready reply: .
«J wanna roasta bif san’wich, str-r-
romberry pie, two cup gkawfee,” was
the simple and clear statement I made
without hesitation. —Life
other than old Abe Potter, who with
his wife owned the retreat, was Le-
roy Boone. Boone was tall and slen-
der. He wore nose glasses and spoke
in a low voice. Except for his woods-
man’s clothes he looked like a college
man. Caroline was disappointed and
yet Leroy was the only man within
sight.”
“I have been waiting to meet a man
of the West,” she said, giving him one
of her best smiles. “I want to learn
all about the customs and peopie.”
“It is probable you will find us
much like the men of any other
place.” He _ was amused at her en-
thusiasm.
“You don’t understand. I come
from a little town in the East. I am
vigorous and independent, in a place
where girls are quiet and ladylike and
men are studious and timid. I wish
to forget books and science, and live
meet a man I want him tec
ber. Can’t you see?”
tion.
with the trees and the hills. When I
be a
miner, hunter, or even a stage rob-
The man of the West removed his
spectacles, drew out a handkerchief
and cleaned the lenses with delibera-
He: “I can tell you how much water
to the quart goes over Niagara
Falls.”
She: “If you know, tell us.”
“Two pints.”
|
ing the highways, the Commission
again solicits the utmost co-operation
from motorists, especially, and asks
“They don’t rob stages out here any
more,” he said, “and most of the cow-
tart of her husband doth safely
her; she will do him good and :
all the days of her life.” Of ness in all that concerns our
ailing devotion to her house- being. .
writer says: “Her candle Mother's Responsibilities.
bt out by night; she stretcheth
hand to the poor; yea, she
h forth her hands to the
“She looketh well to the ways
household and eateth not the
idleness.” Little wonder is
her children “arise up and call
sed; her husband also, and he
her.” It is a lofty concep-
the mother of the household.
tunities detract in any wise from th
peculiarly belong to mother life an
work disaster. No social occupation
for greater refinement and whosesome-
well-
If these new privileges and oppor-
high claims and responsibilities that
mother influence, they must ultimately
no indulgence in those things that con-
cern the state and the nation, may be
substituted for those holier responsi-
bilities that have to do with home and
building and the drain pipes from the
same . are placed in an excavated
e | 2DY necessary repairs without
necessity of digging and removing
a concrete for this purpose.
| The administrative work of the
S,
passageway covered with concrete slabs, 4
with manholes at intervals so that a man |only the many years’ experience of
can enter into the passageway and make |the Victor Company in experimental >
: : the headligh ;
the | work in sound reproduction, together eadlights of the car
institution under the leadership of Dr.
Henry Wilson, is thoroughly systema
tized on a business and economic basis. |
All the inmates are encouraged to be |inghouse
industrious and are helped in any line of | Company. Likewise, the manufactur-
lon the research laboratories of the
pany in the field of radio and repro-
duced music: “The Audio-Vision Ap-
pliance Company has behind it not
with a large staff of scientists and ex-
perts assembled by the Victor Com-|jjperately so.
pany, but it may in the future draw
General Electric Company and West-
Electric and Manufacturing
¢ Victor Company
that they be careful not to run ever
young
Particular care should be exercised at
night when the animals are blinded by
rabbits or other creatures
Thousands
mountains?”
“] might be a tourist like yoursel
biological survey.”
in the hills!
boys have gone in the movies.” After
a moment of deliberation he added,
.| “Maybe, by hunting long enough, I
3 “I see,” Caroline was offended. “You
of valuable game animals are killed| go not understand. But if life is so
annually in this manner, and some de- v
The appliance of the
brakes now and then may save not
only the life of one, but perhaps of
many more of these desirable crea-
tures.
unexciting here why are you in the
but I'm not. You see I work for the
“Mercy that’s a queer thing to have
It means college educa-
tion and books; that you are a stu-
could scare you up a man whose fa:
ther.had been a cattle-rustler?”
That Fairly
Shout at You!
We are “value headquar-
ters” when it comes to
furniture! Our policy of
large volume and small
profits, saves you money!
f
family life. The greatest trust that
God has committed to His children ‘is
that which is given to the mother of
the household. She, more than all
others, determines the moral worth
and strength of our domestic and so-
cial life. To her hands is given the
incomparable privilege of shaping the
characters of her children. The moral
and spiritual ideals of the nation, as a
whole, are largely determined by its
mothers.
The Savior’s Mother.
Little as we know of that simple
home in which the child Jesus was
reared, sufficient is told us to indicate
His mother’s influence as well as her
understanding sympathy. She, above
all others, discerned the high and holy
purpose of His ministry. With pro-
phetic instinct she saw from His earli-
est days what no other eye could dis-
cern.
Poets and painters have exhausted
their genius in portraying this acred
relationship. The modern mothér may
be discrimination the differ- | find in this lowly home at Nazareth
n those who constitute the | an ideal of transcendent loveliness.
ld and exercises a judgment | We may change our customs and our
that is here written concern-
is more significant than the
“In her. tongue is the law of
5.” There can be little higher
way of the fulfillment of the
hind virtues of motherhood than
derstanding Heart.
hw of kindness implies a gentle
Herstanding heart. It will not
bred or distracted through mis-
hndings nor will it yield to the
nnoyances that day by day
Fiction and unhappiness. The
lcindness will not reckon with
It recognizes with understand-
pathy temperamental inequali-
i those elements that render
5 of a household dissimilar in
and practice. The law of
E resists and overcomes the un-
ed and thoughtless utterance
ily forgives the unwitting act
bedience. The mother of the
Bd, like Mary of old, penetrates
the surface of things, weighs
s its inspiration in the law of | ways of living, but we dare not lower tion. It would be to the mutual benefit
s. It is safe to say that this | those high and holy standards that of the farmers and the institution. Such
b gift of mother love is one of | give to the mother the sovereign place | visitors could learn much and their help-
htiest factors in the shaping | to which by divine sanction she was | ful co-operation would be cordiaily re-
acter, and that it contributes | appointed. She must continue to be | ceived and reciprocated.
an orderly and peaceful home | the guardian of a nation’s character. {* In the vicinity of the new building are |
all else. It is the source of | a number of tree stumps and stones that
ent and the inspiration to High and Holy Day | might be removed by prison labor so as
hinking and living. Subtract Mother's day, and its proper ob- j ro render the environs of this building
bh our home life and we impov- | servance, means more than a mere | M10T¢ sightly from the highway. If the
gesture. It is legally required that prisoners who languish throughout the
every person shall associate the love
of mother, whether living or passed.
with the love of country. It is a day
set aside for concentration upon the
ideals of home and the ideals of our
institutions of government. A good
home stands for good citizenship, and
the home is made by the mother.
ndness.
e not thinking, concerning this
rtue, of that kind of cheap
tality that discloses itself in
nminating kindness. Kindness
the loving word of counsel is
indness that reckons not with
bred and orderly household
endeavor for which they may display a
inclination. In the mentally - ill. *his iS
conducive to the comfort and well being
of the unfortunates in enabling them to
emply their minds and hands.
There are 48 milch cows of the
Holstein strain in the dairy barn,
besides numerous other livestock. One
cow produces 90 pounds of milk per
day. Everything is perfectly sanitary
in the dairy barn. The livestock and
poultry exhibit would do credit to a se-
lected county fair.
The poultry farming is especially com-
mendable. All hens are trap nested and
there are more than 1000 hens. The
eggs of about 200 hens being the best
producers are used for hatching.
Eventually through this culture the far-
mers of the county will be enabled to
buy surplus hens of the highest grade.
From 700 to 800 eggs are collected
a record of 29 eggs per month over a
long period.
Enterprising farmers and agricultur-
ists would do well to visit the institu-
year in the county jail could be placed
at labor of this kind on the farm we
believe it would be more humane to the
| prisoners and certainly would be more
| advantageous to the taxpayers of the
county who are obliged to support the
dependents of such prisoners during
their confinement. This labor also might
be used on the farm during the summer
months to great advantage in more in-
ing facilities of
will be trenendc
under the new ayrangement.”—Som-
erset Herald.
daily. Formerly the institution was ob- ard Keith on
liged to buy eggs. There are six incu- |Lake, in Houghs Neck.
bators of 300 capacity. Many hens have [was 15 inches long and bore the date
COUNTY MINISTERS MEET
The quarterly meeting of the Som-
erset County Ministerial Association
was held Monday morning at the Fer-
Rev. J. A.
Robinson, who is conducting a revival
campaign in Somerset, was the prin-
ner Hotel, in Somerset.
cipal speaker.
OLD POWDER HORN
Believed to be a relic of the Revo-
lutionary War, an old-fashioned pow-
der horn was found recently by How-
the shore of Manet
The horn
of 1775.
go abroad to study.”
next door.”
HE KNEW HIS HISTORY
not resist being amused at an ans
| . . .
| given at a recent examination.
question was:
United States.”
gone to—well, not to heaven.
Sly strengthened
Miss Flatt: “I'm sorry you don’t
Prayer of Thgnksgiving
“I give humble and hearty thanks for
the safe return of this book, which, hav-
ing endured the perils of my friend's
bookcase, and the hookcase of my
friend’s friends, now returns to me in
reasonably good condition.
“I give humble and hearty thanks that
my friend did not see fit to give this
book to his infant as a plaything, nor
use it as an ash tray for his burning
cigar, nor as a teething-ring for his
mastiff.
“When 1 lent this book, I deemed it as
lost; I was resigned to the bitterness of
the Jlong-parting; I never thought to
look upon its pages again.
“But now that my book is come back
to me, I rejoice and am exceeding glad!
Bring hither the fatted-morocco and let
us rebind the volume, and set it on the
shelf of honor; for this my book was
lent and is never returned again.
“Presently, therefore, I may return
some of the books that I myself have
borrowed.” —Life.
think much of my voice, professor.
The people next door say I ought to} AT CRESSON SANITARIUM
“Professor: “Yes, but I don’t Mve
Even the grave and dignified Bri-
ADMITTED 32 NEW PATIENTS
| an
Thirty-two new patients at the
State Sanitarium at the Summit were
| admitted recently. There are now
|716 patients receiving treatment for
tuberculosis at the institution.
dent and not a real wild westerner
after all. I didn’t think,” she caught!
herself before confessing she’ did not
think his appearance was promising
and continued, “I didn’t think it
would be so difficult to meet the kind
of men I've read about.”
When Leroy Boone came by again
he brought her a rare flower he had
found on the trail and again he smiled
oddly when he saw she was not
pleased.
“Your western man,” he said, “the
one you have pictured, would not have
picked a flower and carried it so care-
fully. No—I think he would have
been shooting the lights out of a sa-
loon or rescuing a leather-skirted girl
from the hands of the villainous fore-
man of a rival ranch. It's too bad
there isn’t a motion picture house up
here.” He went his way, walking
leisurely as a man with plenty of
time.
“He's angry because I didn’t thank
him for his flower,” Caroline decided.
“Well, as soon as he understands I
do not wish biological surveyors bring-
ing me posies, I will be better satis-
fied. I can see plenty of men like him
at home.” And when she returned to
the cabin she said nothing to the Pot-
ters of the man who had no place in
her picture or scheme.
Several times more the girl met
him and at last she admitted to her-
self there was something in his quiet,
Buy on Terms!
A dignified, easy way to
buy — no fuss or red
tape! Ask about it!
The May Sale is
Now in Progress
’
i | | :
AID
= <c_ |
JR
~
= _
=
=
tish Civil Service commissioners could
wer
The
“Give for any one year the number | kissing festival.
of bales of cotton exported from the
The applicant wrote: “1491 None.”
— Printers’ Ink Monthly
The big business man had died and
But
KISSING FESTIVAL HELD
Berne, Switzerland, recently held
decorated, and from noon to sunset bo
any of the opposite sex they met. T
idea handed down from
took so well, that “smacks” were hea
in all parts of the town during the op
“season” hours.
and girls had the privilege of kissing
ancient rites,
almost tolerant manner that attract
her even while it exasperated.
she would not surrender. She h
a| taken the superior attitude and until
The streets were gaily
he proved himself a hero, worthy
vs! his environment, she would contin
disdainful. By the time she came to
he | leave they were as well acquainted as
the peculiarly strained situation
rd | would allow.
en “] am sorry you are going,” he said,
“sorry because I will miss you a
But
oO
ed
ad
of
ue
nd
hought For the Day
to the dependents of such labor.
and his estimable wife and the
tensive farming, the fruits to ‘be applied
The grand jury also through this me-
dium wishes to express to Dr. Wilson
entire
hardly had he settled down for a nice
long smoke when a hearty hand slap-
ped him on the back, and into his ear
boomed the voice of a persistent
salesman who had pestered him much
RECALL FURLOUGHED MEN
Increase in business on the Yonghio-
gheny Division of the Pittsburgh and
Lake Erie railroad has resulted in recall
Was the man going
And what would she say?
to prop
because you should stay long enough
to get the real values of our West.”
Caroline
felt suddenly her values had changed
ose?
HAT would you think of a boy who would strike his mother? You
hate to think of anything so unpleasant, don’t you? Words cane
pxpress your opinion of one who would intentionally injure his
er.
DW stop a minute. Probably some time in your life you have had
a bloody nose or a skinned knee. And probably some time in
life some one has made an unkind remark that hurt you dread-
Which really hurt the worst? The nose or the knee was better
few hours or a few days, but your injured feelings bothered you
long time after that unkind remark.
E meaning of all this is clear: You have only contempt for a boy
ho would strike his mother, but do you realize that an unkind
8 to her may hurt her feelings more than a blow? Boys—and girls,
are so much more careless with their tongues than with their
Don’t you be one to let your tongue inflict pain.
AT'S a good thing to think about on Mother’s day.
management their sincere appreciation
of the cordial treatment accorded them
during their visit.
MISSION HELD IN
CATHOLIC CHURCH
A mission was opened here Sunday
morning in the Catholic Church, by
Redemptorish Father from Baltimore,
on earth.
“Well, Mr. Smith,”
ment.
“What appointment?”
salesman went on.
came into your office you told
you’d see me here!”
Md., which will continue all week. Ser-
vices morning and evening. First Mass
[at 5:30 and second at 8 o’clock. Services
in the evening at 7:30. Every body in-
vited to attend.
STEAM ENGINE TO FORD
steam-driven automobile made by the
placed in the Ford Museum, at Dear-
born, Mich.
MINER BADLY HURT
| very serious condition
| slate.
{
| for the Baker-Whitely Coal Compa
chortled the of
salesman, “I'm here for the appoint-
“Why, don’t you remember?” the
“Every time I
IN HOOVERSVILLE MISHAP
William Farkas, aged 54 and mar-
| ried who lives in Hooversville. is in a
| in Memorial
| Hospital, the result of being injured
The two-cylinder engine of the first | late Saturday afternoon in a fall of
He suffered fractures of the
Pope Company at Toledo, Ohio, more | pelvis on both sides and underwent |
than a quarter century ago, will be|an operation soon after taken to the | Youth—What a pity!
| hospital. The patient was employed | really good remedy. v
furloughed engineers and
Ten acting firemen were returned
men are back on duty.
GOODNESS GRACIOUS!
me rr—
“Anything besides collars, shi
and handkerchiefs, sir?
some pajamas?”
feller, I don’t join any big parad
when night comes, I go to bed.”
VERY ANXIOUS TO HELP
| you often have indigestion?
Girl (astonished)—No!
ny. |
i
firemen.
their posts as engineers and fifteen fire-
—Portland Advertising Spotlight
Youth (making conversation)—Do
I know a
to| the banter which enraged her.
parson. But as it is,
”»
rts “Say good-by,” finished Caroline
How about, and she hastened to the cabin vow-
‘ ‘ * ing she would be glad to forget this
“I ain’t no social rounder, young, man who had no right to pretend to
be of her West.
As Abe Potter drove her over
the station he mentioned Boone.
“He works for the biological s
es;
id
in one day
For five minutes Caroline was
and that she was going to miss him.
Then came that tantalizing Smile and
“If I were the sort you Lave been
looking for I would kidnap you, throw
you over a horse and take you to the
I can only
vey,” he said. drawing the words out
importantly. “They hires him to hunt
mountain lions.- Last week he got five
lent. Then timidly she said, “Mr. Pot-
ter, turn around and drive me back.
—London Passing Show, I'm going to stay another week.”
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