{ title: 'The Otsego journal. volume (Gilbertsville, N.Y.) 1876-1965, June 11, 1879, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031134/1879-06-11/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031134/1879-06-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031134/1879-06-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031134/1879-06-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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A LIVE LOC&L-PAPER. w =- $1.00 Per Year In Advan nomena lll, cools cca . -. TV ..N o. 6.~ - Gilbertsville, 613er Oo, N.Y.: J 153516 11, 187197,” E 0 t sero J ou’rn al $20 fm fact that Berthildn. had an offer as a sort of | writing to me this morning? I'm Mr. Peter The Deacon and the Irishman, Trial of a Strange Mundhnl‘pa'a‘éh g i ‘f im * miracle not likely to occur again, and he Nad Perkins, Mr. Flint.\ 27 -- _ t Con an idea that women always like to get mar- | \I know you well enough;\ said Flint. | - As Deacon Ingalls of Swampscott was trav: | - Miss Lillie Duer fs on trial at. Snow Hi] V IL L M. DEIT Z. \Nover Mind.\ > ried. -_ | f'D'ye think I'm in my dotage ? - Ydu're the | elling through the western part of the State of | Maryland, for ahooting Miss: Ella Henri); Eprror axp Proprateton. __ Hoskins was well to-do and respectable. iman that killed my brown horse last summer, | New York, be fell in with an Irishman who young girl only about sixteen years of ago. $ > What's the use of always fretting She should have him. if she chose. - She had aid asked for my gray mare to do the same | lately arrived in this country, and was in | The strange story of the murder is related a K8.-The Journal will be sent to subscribers in At the trigts we shall find been a good girl to him, and he reall feltan | by this. And I told you what I thought of} quest of a brother who had come before him | follows: a » ou C - fae ado ive giggifiznfifiaggefigggg? ._ Eyer strown along our pathway ? affection for her. 10 9 -- | yoh in my note. Yo: must have been Srink- and settled in some of the diggings in this| Lillie Duer and Ella Hearn were closo co As. for Perkins. he ghmld not have his) img, Mr. Perkins! You must be drunk; sir, | vicinity. panions, but were alike in hardly anything Travel on and \never mind.\ Travel onward; working, hoping, Cast no lingering glance behind fmadvance on all papers leaving the count ersons finding a cross before their name on the ' companion, who is 21 or 22 years old., Lillie: ; f fi°§éfgfifiofl§§st3$ ntflo afificéelipé‘fi'rnin‘é‘ ping What is past is past forever; Perking his gray mare, indeed, He would pm a Son of Temperance, sir!\ shouted Mr. | - It was a pleasant Sunday morning that Mr. | Duer is masculine even. in her dress. -As a, s DVERTISING. & \ B P. I sau, ore . ch 1 weeEERM $011: xf columan, 8 months, $ 6.00 Do your best, and \never mind.\ before he atten led to Berthilda's offer, . \Then if you're sober, you can't read,\ said | _ IN&AIIs was a good and pious man. pockets containing what better pertained: to H .50 3 . a \g oa A 0 e 5g (\4 ibere realding outside of the county must send ts additional, as we shall he obliged to payyw— * f \ Pat \a st , y ing:? - horse. - He had overworked the one he had | to nek me for my gray \mare after what I Fat was a strong athletic man, a true Cath-} Miss Hear was a very pretty, very largin will understand that their subscription At the trials once encountered, borrowed of him last harvest time, and the | wrote you this morning !\ olic, and had never seen the interior of a Prot- | nate girl, several years younger than: her xpired and that a renewal is necessary, . *- Look ahead and \never mind.\ poor brute had died in consequence. Lend '*\T drinking I néver touch anything but tea. | stant church. be sent free to regular correspondents. Let all fretting be resigned ; give him a piece of his mind for his impu-| Péikins, so that his voice reached the ears of | IO&Alls met Pat who inquired the road to the schoolgirl she played boy's games,. smoke ' 0 It will never help the matter- dence. And he would settle that business thii; unbeppy couple at the gate. \I drunk!» | Rearest church. - cigarettes, wore jackets like a boy's, with. $ year.... And if those Whoylgifl befriend you, ___ |__ So he drew _his-blotter toward him seized Mr. Flint, {Te told Pat he was going to church himself | masculine pockets than hers-even to the con-. ~d months, 18.00 Whom the tesof nature bind, & pen and ink, and indicted this peppery | - \You wrote me a note telling me to come) Abd invited his new made acquaintance to} cealment of a pistol, which she; was: seldom é Tay 33:33 mfg? {2111233313315 3:52 mind, epistle : . dyer, and saying there was nothing in the way kch him company thither (his destination without, and which she used with consider- {i en: J 2338 S e Sir: I don't wonder. you wrote and hadn't ogmy having the gray mare,\ said Mr. Por-] b¢ing a small Methodist mcefing house. near | able skill. She wore a boyish her- Business cards fre lines or lens, sang DB; .y.e::;r. - szgiytzvgzzlx; 03211“ 21:32? <] the face to come and ask me for what you kine. > a lty.) , There was a great revival there at the | dresses scldCtm reached below her ankles., She All bills for advertising payable quarterly; For all Y he“; ton vaio ; wanuvec, like aimuu. Let you lmve'her, in-| untrue, sit!\ faid Mr. Flint. time, and one of the de‘qcons (who, by. the | was seldom in the company of men or boys; xanslent advertising payment must be made in ad- Take them for t > deed ! _| When every one knows you killed the «You area lying, sir!\ said Mr. Perkins | W8Y was very 'small in stature,) invited but was fond of paying to her girlish compan vance. . Pass them by, and \ never mind.\ other one by hard work, and only sent her in hi M - dos Prtwztxg.-We have good facilities for exe- home to bthuric d. - A ypretcy | d'gu that, in- | _ \Hanged if ['ll stand it!\ And now Miss| Brother Ingalls to take a seat in his pew. He|ions the gallant attentions of a suitor: - §) os fo eon oo ie ° and tasty manner, tiring-1,31??? Fay tower deed! She was just a rack of bones when | Berthilds saw her uncle menaced by a bony | the invitation and walked in, follow-| was fond of saying Tit women should wed Editor Journat., # may be combined ; you got through with her, and, I judge, half | fist, and flew up the path, with Hoskins after| 64 bY Pat, who looked ip vain to find the al- | with each other, and declared wBen:she was.. starved as well as worked to death. You'll her. h tar. - After he was seated he turned to Broth: married it would be to n She was, Giibertaville, Otsego Co., N. Y. © © If your trust in God is steadfast, ou may, if you get her ; | but you'll only do| - :\¥69 abominable rascal !\ cried Mr. Flint. | ¢\ Ingalls, and in a whisper loud enough to be | as often feared «is admired among the youn y He will save you, \ never mind.\ R’romlse to take good care of her, no doubt. . gngifl A 53 Q ar dais! - . that by stealing her; and, as I soppose you : ATells me I'm drunk and a liar, sit,\ cried \£3\ d all ar Orlfld,‘ inquired}. «A-| women of her acqualutancé,, and it ls said of , \ Qar £10)”, £311?” are quite capable of that, I shgll see av; my | Perkins to Hoskins.-*\Asks him neighborly to Sure, an dien't this heritic?\ her that she once challengedia- young womarr * 3; C_ ola lae f Le: locks: fee . Fost, &nd me his gray mare, and he wrote he ** Hush,\ said Ingalls, \if you speak a loud | who offended ber to fight a duel for honor's ALVIN BENNETT, Tl”? finished, he wrote more briefly to Mr, would, and now calls me al! the names he can | Word they will put vou out.\ sake. - Both the Duers and the Hearns live in Attorney-8400111139101- at Law BERTHILDAS OFFER. | | “32:51:11! I can't ste anything in the way lay his tongue to.\ _ \Divil a word y \ I spake at all, at all,\ | Newton, and the heads of tie families: are. nd Notary Public ‘ =-- ~ Slt, w - «\I don't doubt it, sir!\ said Mr. Hoskins. replied Pat. 1d ® mechanics. They were not at ll restricted Mr. Umfi. (lzlnennngo’ g, N. Y.. fam giving! Mr. Flint had the reputation of being as Zguiogzef';l;§u ”Egg\ afizutmaxlfitbveiou can '4Te's insulted me, sir. - 'Pold me I worked | - The mecting was with a prayer by socially, and Miss Hearn was a gencral favor- riggingggnggrnfiflgwfi?$3133?w?:()r[x:gmlmgfng hard as his name. Certainly he was a sort 100 ' Yours, Frixt. - | my poor late Abigal Araminty to death and| the pastor. Pat was eyeing him very clescly | ite and in great - Gemand wherever young in Postofice building. atojani | of crusty old gentleman, with a disugrecable Having done these, he put each into an en- | starved her, and was a thief and aferrd\ of | when-an old gentleman who was standing? in people gathered in the town. 'The. young habit of telling what he considered to be the velope and sent them off. * him. - Writ that to me, sir! | Hang him !\ the pew directly in front of Pat, shouted : women became nequainted at the ‘J‘illnge, ° 4. G. W 4 8 HBO N, plain truth to every one. As every one did Poor Berthilds scarcely dared to raise her | - \That's false!\ said old Flint. ** Glory 1 \ school, and Lillie Duer at once \fell in , not bow low at once and say, \Mr. Flint, eyes to her uncle's face that day; but his \Now I'm a liar, am I?\ cried Hoaktins. ** Hist, ye clear divil,\ rejoined Pat, with love\ with her new | friend. They were to- At t 0 rney’ at Law, you are perfectly right,\ this babit of frank- manner to her was unusually kind, and she|- *You are both insane!\ cried Flint, his loud whisper, which was plaibly heard by | gether every diy, and Miss Duers behavior . . ness had brought him into a great many | had allowed herself to hope much from it, 'You never writ that to me ?\ cried Hos.| the minister, \ be dasent and don't 'make a| was always that of a passionate | lover to- -_ Gilbertsville, N. Y. 14 / quarrels with his friends and relatives, 80 | when as sho sat at her knitting in the evening, | kins. . blackguard of yourself.\ , ward - the companion, - whose mind and zz - 'that ablast the ouly one of his own blood Pegay, the sole domestic, beckoned mysteri-| - ''No doubt its true, but I didn't cried Flint, | - 'The parson grew more and more fervent in | movements she seemed to have mastered.. ~ EAMING-_ with whom he was on speaking terms was his ously to her from the door ; - and having thus | - \He is crazy,\ said Hogkins. . his devotions. - Presently the deacon uttered | _ Miss Duer's behavior annoyed Miss Hearn, M. M. NEWMAN would announce that he | nicce Berthilda, who kept house for beguiled her into the hall, informed Wer that | - \Mad as a Murch hare, said Perkins. an andible groan, who seems to. have heen afways anxious to . wwan continue to doteaming from Gliberts- | him, to whom he wfiuuauully kind, and | yp. Hoskins wanted to see herat the gie. **You are a couple of lunaties.-I'll be pro. | - '\Hist-ss-t ye blackguard, have ye no da-} break up the companionship | and always half 512312135ifiéfififfifif’efifgéfi“‘ifflflifi‘LLZi-‘Q‘Eefi‘r’gf who believed him to be a modern Solomon. 'To the gate Berthilda went in a state of | lected against you. | Help! Some one o for | cency at all?\ said\Pat at the same moment afraid of herstrange companion, Miss'Hem ir 0611ngfirgghpigéll’elmgnénle atmy residence in oi. hed never once contradicted him. . [ the constable !\ 1C giving the deacon a punch in the ribs, which | left Miss Duer once last summer after they ville, the best quality of When he told her that the Flints were gen- bon bow in her bait dquiver like a humming.] | \A lunatic!\ said Mr. Perking-\Why | caused him fo nearly lose his equilibrium. | had been walking in the woods together, anu, Sqit, Feed and Corn, eraliy - good-looking, but that she - took. bird, and there she found Mr. Hosking, so there's the letter you writ me. - If you were a | The iminister stopped, extended his hand, and retracing her steps, was about to return home tog-flue at theijxfizt £2“! Pr{5‘§- M. NEwaay, [After her mother's family, who were all as red in the face with rage that the , color was an“); man, I'd not stop to argy: hut you're| in 8 supplicating manner, said : why alone. - Miss aer commanded her to return; . Al . 22220. plain as.pike staffs, she answered, \ Yes, | \CC t8ce With ruge that the Pipet adr HbGgIr to bom mherg‘mw-M—ALBrezhemnrwe-cannuhhvdmubbedmfink-Miss“Harm continneditodropd hyar- «me a > h - - percéntibile by the moonlight, and his gree R & y m a edi to\ nidvecaways F. BLACK MAN, uncle, but that is not my fault, you know.\ *That's another lic,\ said Flit t. - You are| way.. Will somebody get that man out ?\ - | Miss Duer produced her pistol, and, affor a , . . ing was this: ' bok P , R DEALER IN When he suid she need not mind about being) 7, Berthilda, if old Flint was anybody's 50 years old.\ Yes, your riverence,\ shouted Pat, \I| second command and a warning, fired three */ ‘N . a | T I gPOd-gooking, because, affer all, she wis u uncle but yourn I'd go in and pummel the “Wellt that's we letter you writ me, any | Will,\ and Slllfin\; the action to the work, he times, the bullets passing so close to the girl's 1 y 1 iuce little thing and would be more apt to be way,\ said Perkins, holding out a crumpled | collared the little dencon, and, to the utter head that she herd them na they cut through breath out of him. | I've a minter do it now,\ Gilbertsville, N. Y. nervous agitation which made the blue rib | ive 3 f R cet o horror an is e r > ral irw ar lag . : eft to keep houge fofmm fueru-‘y she appeared | _,, Ob. dear,\ sobbed Berthilds, \ What is shut: of [HUN-T. . 1a (ll‘l d astonishment of thc'pustohBrolhu the air f\fl(.‘-\.hd, Miss Duer declared sho to be comforted. She was mild and meck, Flint took it in his hand, glanced at it and | Ingalls and the whole congregation, he dragged | was only in fun, but would bave fired mote and her vanity had been taken out of her by said, \It isn't;\ but his face altered. him through the aisle, and with a tremendona accurately had naother shot been neccessary: her uncle's frankness. \Contradicts anything.\ apd Perkins. kick landed him in the vestibule of the church. | After this, until the end of the summer, Miss She w ally o r I se you' inv f 6 . ~ poot trane n e r retai a . ir he Bhe was really by no me 3m“ so very Plum, Hosking. - \ Batd 1 writ 'cause I was afraid tn | _- \I 8uppose you'll deny t you wrote me His Trousers Got Shortened. Duer retained hit power ower her companion; but she necepted Mr, Flint's opinion without ' ' 27 ant . is sai , e } , . | nek him for you ; - said every one know that 1| thAt ?\ said Hoskins, offering another letter to _-_ who is awl to have attempted every means fa murmur. f t was all gennine. She was killed Abigal Armminty with overwork, and | tht 014 man, w The Allentown (Chromite says: - A certain | C8CCPt flight to escape fro.a her. | Miss Hearn: now . - P o ; B aid: A F a ; r +5 love: F 5‘L7v see- 'one of those little women, who nalunl.ls bf)“ starved her to denth, and sent her over to her [ Yes, I do,\ he said: but this time he gentleman purchased a pair of pants a few | N* ”fog?“ the 5th of November while sho ol 44k A (11 before the head of the fanuly and worship him. grinned. days ago, which, upon being tried on at home | Wit bidding Miss Duer good-by at her door. Li & Pagnell Rt , ma's to be busied, Now Abizal Araminty , , - L als w --a She had not even reflected that he might died of the consumption that was in her fam- 'Porhans a secret enemy,\ _- murmured | he found to be too long. - That night he re. | Miss Duer had cailed on ber, and the vig SPECIAL NOTICE, leave her his money, or 'some portion of it. ily, and I spent lots: in doctor's stuffs; cand, | Bembilda. 2, marked to his wife that he wished her to take} W88 Paid in the presence of Mrs: Hearts LL PRRSONH IHJAVING UNSETTLED _ AC|It was too dreadful to think of Uncle Flint's} .. Unele Flint looked at ber, her nose was red off about an fuch from each leg, which would | WBN Miss Duer rose to go, Miss Hearn fol- ae e ; if she was busied from her ma's. that was the -A_Sounts with the undersigned are respectfully in dvi if a I . tha . Mowe , i - R . - rp requested to call and settle the same before ever dying at all. old Indy's wish. - And Araminity, she would | With weeping. make them the desired length, Being fond | lowed her to the frontcoor. FThegirls had A A P .. r The First of January Next. As for marrying it did not enter Berthildn's go there to die. - And I did all mortal man | - 'YOu Sre a good girl, Berthilda, if you are | of teasing. her husband, she told hiin that she} P°°R sullen towards each other, and Miss lfi°flgnrflr§$§kfi$§ém’§f¢7§6’ffiri¥\'$fii'e“c'§lamrge mind. | She had written berself down a spin- could, and I hired belp, and I wnan't no wise] 89 43!Y 006,\ said Uncle Flint. | \For your shouldn't do anything of the kind, and he re.| Duer had, with grout rudeness, snatched a ® : P ° sake ['ll explain matters. | I wrote both those | tired without having obtained a promise from | [rom her companion the needlework upet ater ns soon as she heard Uncle Flint's opin- hard on Abi A . gal Araminty ; and your uncle, ans . N FUR THE HOLIDAY TRADE ion on the subject, ' which was oracularly he's a lint, and if he'll come out here, Pj] MCT but I sent them to the wrong «men. | her that she would attend to the matter. which she was ougiged. Miss Hearn heard a.qall advanccxfgzz $27; iii-515321111513. given when she was about sixteen years of wring his noek. | I've as much as I kin do to That's | yours; - Hoskins. - Perkins, ”I'm ‘i‘i Boon after he had left for. his room, how. | them ”mighi'j” at the door, however, and BUpw F. BLACKMAN -| 360; but now that she was nearly thirty, she keep from saying words a man hadn't orter | Y9U9°8 - 880 IL meant | every ward. of it!\ { ever, she as a matter of course, clipped off the | Posed they were on good toermsagnin. - A few _ men oz --> _- . _-_ - | was astonished by the appearance of a lover say after he's fined the church. I never wai | A94 be handed the letters to their proper superflueas inch, as she had been asked to do. miryules Inter Mre. Hearn beard the report of i y. f < owners. The family is composed of six female mem-] 3 Pistol. and her daughter ataggered back to -;; -_ oR +_, in the shape of a stout farmer of forty, 8} g, mad in my life: | Tim bursting with rage. * f . . y I ' or. l; 10 WwW 5&3 [1]th atOI‘S widower without children, and owner of as and he says I'm a thief, and he's no doubt T1] _ FH seeif this aint a caso of libel!\ eaid vers, and each one of the five, who were in | 10 the doorway of the fitting room, We are prepared to furnish all who wish with tne | APC 2 Piece of property as could be found in steal you if I can ; and so I will. | It's jus, | Perkins, as he walked off. adjoining room, heard the dispute between | D°\ hands, and fell back upon the floor. Sh6 celebrated the State. this horthildn, you come along with me now But Hoskins advanced and held ont his man and wife, and after the latter Imd - taken | 444 bvc‘n shot in the mouths and her faco was ONEONTA CLIPPER. It was n case of love at first sight on his “nd' get parson Speer to marry us now, 0; large hand. off the required inch and retired, the old lagy | bathed in W‘Ml' Miss Hearn rn fron the. Plow has taken the first premium over all part, and Berthilda, finding berself made} \. __\ \'Let bygones be bygones,\ he said. - \May desiring to keep pesce in the family, and not | NOUS. crying for help from the neighborg. '',, other reversible plows wherever exhibited. Also the a . there's an end of it. T's all up between us, ; taran . Miss Dauer h R B oP - love to, and being quite unused to the situa- unless you choose betwixt. old Flint and me, I have Berthildn, Mr. Flint? knowing what her daughter-in-law had done, | MIMG [het \ad gone. Miss Hearn was'co Excelsior chilled P ow, tion, felt that it was her duty to refuse him, and if you choose him why, I ain't under ob. | - '*94 S89 ask her,\ said Flint, cautiously slipped into the room and cut off | to her bed, and became delirious, For level land acknowledged by all to be the bert * And though Berthilda only said. \Ob | another inch. maining so for more thin a week. - She and cheapest plow In market. . We warrant our Since to marry would be to contradict Uncle ligations to you no longer, and shall make © plows to suit, f Flint's distinct assertion that she was born to jelly of him In three m5; of a'sheep's ini], \ | dent,\ and cried again, Hoskins was contented, | - In this way did each of the five ladies, up. | four weeks and three days efter. the shobtidg; and the wedding came off in due time. known to the other, and all with the sa ne » \* Our Stock of Cultivators be an qld maid ; and yet she yielded to the At thise worry Berthilda cried more than praiseworthy object of preventing any mis- The Buttermilk. the matter ?\ . ** He's writ me a letter that was jest chock full of insults from fust to last,\ said Mr. Ts Iarge and complete. Prices lower than ever. advances of Mr. Hoskins so far as to al- AIM,» The RICkart Horse. Hoe, low herself to be seen home from \ meeting,\ £35032;mmfieflwxhoxxemsznaf n Rossa. -They have a desperate | understanding between the couple, clip an __ . e A axiflfimffiffloulko 16 top well known. No | kissed at the gate, andé‘rfmmiomny encireled | )\ cheeks. po T way afidymg things in Russiay Whenever inch from the legs of the gentleman's trousers | A young lady from the city, boarding , Srocxk or Waterrow» Woop Pour, by a large arm, which, fafter a squseze or twos, \* Oh! O! O!\ she sobbed, was ever a any one is arrested there the fact is kept| The following morning, all unconscious of | the surnmer at a fnrmjhonse on tl‘xebtml t Jum received. All in want of a Good Charn Power .she always put away with a shocked little poorwo‘mnn 'in Sl;Ch trouble ? 0'! o im a secret, and CVC’YbOdY w'ho calls at the | what had had‘mkcn place during the night, Delaware counfy. visited the dary’ attic}: wan gnu 3mm gor raid?!) 0:12: ll.“ look our | squeal, \Choose!\ cried Hoskins, \and darned house of an arrested, pet-3m is also put finger he rolled up his pants in & piece of paper, am? and Wtrlctmd max-marking attention th Gmgcvmagugn “101131 MAYNE, Finally Mr. Hoskins offered himself, and if I ain't m'm ad I don't keer much which arrest. - Recently a physician in goodpm‘ctlce took them to the tailor to be shortened to the | try maid in her toil. 2005 &e Berthilds, having confessed to a partiality way you choose. - Pd rather like to be at lib. | * St Petersburg was arrested, and it so | desired lerigth. - Upon a hasty glance the lat-| *' Your task is a laborSonsont, \she for him, ended by asserting that Uncle Flint! \Y Z) for old Flint and mash-by jin happened that at the time he. was captured & | ter ventured the opinion that they were short | ed to the maid. should decide the matter, and that she dared in; ° Fo y 10:11:11 ”m Tkslm a famgy jigging gin: enough already ; but the owner insisted that zmewhm- 323m” mi reply. pot mention the subject to him. ; . ta gn . e habit 0: uring night | they were fully an inch too long. - The tailos | _ \* Nature ia ® wound 'in her j i Why don't T die?\ sbtbed Berthild®. [the childs {Incss has?“ more tiny and our MP5“ d retired. - | ings. continued the lady. = Ofscrea a ( \* Well then, I will,\ said Mr. Hosking. \I}.. 3 - C For the Lowest Rates on Tickets to the ain't afraid of no man, and if your uncle has that“ S'ws-ngdtittz laws-\Lucie Flat Hke | ge father wont to fetch the Moctor; but on| On the following Saturday he called for the [ Tn in the finds, and 39 a sho-t that § . ith | aim, ma . ._, at the door he was sized by the| pants and took them home, and was supreme.] verted into milk, and from m¥k t WT AND SOUTHWEST figmen $1122; he fii‘ifii 0:2? “The; fierzugw said Silas Heskin®, | poticeand carried off in spjte of his protests. 1y disgusted nt finding that the legs reached| \ Yes ma'am.\ a are so particalar, ida; bein' of Afgzzia it toa d lath -like 8 The mother waited an Hour or more, and only a trifle below the knee. He straightway| \ Heney is a strange anomaly A186, . Call on or address, Ipmh'tm Bah t: has though, to moment a long, gure finding that her husband did not return, went | accused the tailor, his wife heard him, | the little bee wandering from flower . age, I can't see why he anything to say strode past them and began to hammer at the to the physician's house, where she, too, was | and to l explaining .that she + about it.\ . * . N Bine i M G. B. Klmb all, To which Berthilda, sobbingly replied m; “33; t it, and P Perking arrested, | Meanwhile the + child - remained hndmkenaninchfromendxet’mmgg' and positingninglobxflsrfagnn AGENT, her uncle's word was her law, and was kissed | voice foqutred for Mr. 127i)“. eer in the house, and on the following | her acknowledgement was followed by that of| _ \* Yes 3'®m.\ aeg c 4\ 3\ - ' . - - Wa morniig i dead. r when i \Arms Sidney Plaing p. y. |il \}} it ® utual this conversation having | . «fe. Fitut at ouce appeared in the entry. |\\\\° \* *=\ $3333“ hoge “The \had. beex told the milk is termed bat A Mindi mm place on Sunday evening on the way ''Well, what do you want here? was the A tiny spider dropped from the celling into shmmeiwtiwgahSmMst?n&a been **In there nat m church. L , [ TT _ | safotation. a sleeping church member's mouth recently - - age 99 MILLINERY! On Monday morning, old Mr. Flink going| ewail, ifr. Fiint,\ said Peter Perkins, | It went down into the mammoth cavern ; ; any practical use? a 2 cavern and! 'A womin cured her kusbard of saying - (TJ AX rom ready to aniend to the wanta of ihe mammmmmemm-mmmmgzuym neighborly | pullad its web in after it. Another waming T «s i | oie a t 0 ont | called his ofce and where. he transacted his | about that fray. mark I kinder eil, Fern qualacter Teauy business as notary public, found lying on his | fest step in and lead her over to right. You Ing my patroms for past favore, I an exrty GBL ast fo, letters already lft for him that see I get in my bay fommorrer, and thergs® each asked hitm for something. mambupdmgmeeadoffieffieékg‘ct Orne was from |I c tet.» - Se BNE, L... Pene voie 6 po tort war ea % & | Shh ore thee they Year desire to Pare can ios |, k £ the Prcas TNive *~* os by Nearing thows pele * g= *-