ATHENS OF TO-DAY.
XODEWI GREECE and HER THRIFTY
PEOPLE.
».«lM laiin.i la tk.dMH-Par.
naalltr af the Xla* aad «.Me
Sraak. ata Mae T.akew mf the Ia»l
Prerer Trade ae4 Pelltlea to Terra
lar-Art ul MeHtin.
P. 0. (Jar renter hi Bt. la* BcpahUs.
The trouble between the Greek* sad
the Turk* mar «nd In the dismember
ment of the Turkish Empire. The law
of Crete, It ha* anlo aad again been
prophesied, would be tbe beginning of
the and. Crete la the kay to tbe Dar
danelles and tbe Bosphorus. Portia
ostioos here oonld easily oommand tbe
so Iran ee to tbe Black (tse, sod If tbe
Greeks hold Orate It la a queetloo
whether they will not bold It for the
UueeUne. Tills Is whet the English
fpared when Uray presented Graces
from taking tbe Island In I860. This
was shortly after tbs marrlsge of King
George to a Russian prloeaaa, and the
Baglteb were afraid bis wife would
tarn bis feeling* toward Russia. This
danger exists to-day. Queen CMge Is a
Russian of tbe Russians. She la you
know, tbe oousln of tbs present Char.
Mbs wae tbe nteee of AlexanderII, and
bar daughter not long since married a
Roeeian .Prince. I sneut tome time In
Athens just before tbe Priaoeae Alex
andra was married, and daring my
■toy bad a afaaoce to laarn much about
tbs royal family. I bad an intesrlew
with tbs King, through our Minister
to Athens, aad met many friends of
Qoeen Olga. She has practically Ros
nanlssd the King, 1 am told. Ha has
not adopted tbe Bosnian religion, but
by law me sons have to belong to the
Greek Obarob, which is, you know,
the obarob of Rosario. I was la
Greece on the King’s birthday. Tble
Is a national holiday, and at suob times
tbs King and Qoeen appear at chnTch
together. They rit epos ebalra of gold
cushioned In red mlret, while all tbe
rest of the people In tbe ohuroh must
•*“«» bp- Queen Olga Is very due
looking. 6he Is u bloods, with hrowu
hair, regular restarti end a beautiful
nook and shoulders. She Is tall and
riately, and M erery inch a Queen.
Tbe Greeks are aery proud of her.
They admire her when she appears at
bar receptions In gorgeous dresses,
weuriog many pearls and diamonds.
They loro bar because sbe does not put
oo airs, often going about the oily of
Athens without trail a maid with her.
The Greeks are democrats rather than
roynUste. and they like bar democratic
ways. They admire ber also oo ac
count of bar character. Sbe le a wom
an of culture, speaking nearly erery
European language. As soon as ebe
became Queen ebe took op tbe study
°f Greek, and ebe la cow the patron of
a number of schools for girls which ebe
baa founded. It Was In an Industrial
■nbool that tbe weddlog drees of the
Priooees Alexandra wu made, and the
work was done by young Greek girls.
A CHAT WITH THS IIXO OF OSWCI.
1 found that tbe King vaa very pop
ular among the people, lfy aodlaoee
with him wm arranged by oar Minu
ter to Groaoa. HU Majwty reoalvrd
mo to bU palace, and from tbe demo
matlc way la wtoloh he treated me I
oould mo whv he U ao much liked by
tboGruaka. He ebook my band aa I
wee preoeated with a good deal more
cordiality than I bar* over gotten
from a Preeldect of the United Stateo.
He looked, however, much more digni
fied than any PiMidcat ever did. He
wpe dtCMed in a uniform not unlike
the undreee uniform of one of oqr army
GeneiaU. HU ooat wai battened np
to the neck and there waa a little gold
braid on bla collar. Ho it, I believe,
about Uve feet 10 lnebeetall, bathe
etood oo otralgfat that he Mamed to me
to bo over 6. Ho U a very baodaome
man. HU face U blood; hUbatrUof
a light color and a blond muataebe
■howa oof over a strong, well-out
month. 1 wm ourprUed when be
greeted me la the beat of HngUih. Be
■poke It ao well aa I did, and our ooa
venatloa waa carried on la that lan
guage. Ha aaked me a number of
question* about things in America and
grew eotboslMtle a* be talked of ttw
future of Greece. Ha told me that tbe
Greeks were a very patriotic doodU
sad Mid that they had alt the bravery
and force of the Greek* of the poet.
Ho referred to the roollrood develop
which WMgotor on la the coun
try, and Mid that Athene would be a
moeh greater city than U bad *w
by In the past. Throughout ^be
whoU Interview I could mo that he
JT °* lb* ^nwka- He
bM a right to be oo, for It U largely
dpe to hi* that Oruvee 1.U,
good ooodHbm to-day.
TWA 0 |tnaga OF 18*7.
Vary little U Frown about tha
flreako, Thay »ra tha Yaakaaa of the
Wot Hut. Thay are thrawd apaoala
Uin and am Um onooay makara of the
MadUerranaao. Tha bigaaat buataaaa
haoaaa of Ygypt are owoad by Graaka.
I toned Omaha aaUlag good* in Jaru
■atan and thay boro larga aataUtah
manU in Smyrna nod OnnaUotlnopta
£*2L«» “ “ach brighter than tha
Torka Utat tha eemoaon mytng among
thaMtaria: «Tto3 UMuHrnkTa
Athena, from tha Jrwa of felealea,
good Lord ddifm «.» Ill, mid In
»•*«*“• **■* oaa Greek teeqael
to at too* two Jawa, and the Jew*
kdjdtod* ,,°0® tlaen up eomlng to
Atbaaa, aa thay eaa maka so money
tbare. Tha Ureeka pride tham^aa
OB thalr damoeraey. Tha* raaoaat tha
King, bat thay don't thick that bo la
any battar than tkammNm, aad thay
*J that tha* ballaya eo maah U torn*
ty wowgtfmtka that thaw >reAr to
tataafomtcMrralaoaar them. Tba
Kl.g*. rata. bawrrar, la oaly a limited
Xrwry Greek think* hlmaalf a
*5 & b*r u,k
would Imagine thay warn reaalag alt
Xwega. Thalr aeaitrylg, you know
ooty abo^ as larga ao Warn Virginia,
or ahoothalf the aloe af Um *tete o*
N*w York, and tta popalatloo la not
»or* than 8,000,000, tbough then am
about aa many aiote Greek's scattered
throughout tba otbar couotrtea of tho
Mediterranean.
▲ MAT10IV Or POLITTOAITS.
Than la mom poliUoal dleouasioa to
Albans than there la to Washington.
Wblta this trouble with Grata goes on
huhinoaa will probably be given op for
the time, and the people will do little
alee than talk about tba Mtoatloo.
The ohlef places for euofa gossip are tba
cates, of wtiloh them ere hundreds in
Athene. Here every afternoon end
eveolog thousands of people ooaee to
gether to drink coffee sod Ulk polities.
The newsboys bring round tba politi
cal papers, of which there am half a
down to Athens, sod each mss baa ble
paper and bla ooffea. Tbeae papers
are printed la the aams eheractera
which you And la tbs same Greek olaa
sioe, and the modern Greek language
ie much tba am as the old Greek. I
found that J coaid get along with a
little phrase book, and eosld even read
some of tbe Jokes to the Greek comlo
papers. i
rouTtoAL soon nr onuses.
The Greek* of to-day are aa great
rtomo speaker* ae their for*fathers
were. There is much ehrewd slsctlon
Mriog done, and the wires of the
Grecian candidates help their hnsbends
ealte ee mooh se our Amertoao wires
do theirs. Some of tbe women even
electioneer for their husbands, aod X
was told of one Greek women w)>o,
seeing that her husband would proba
bly bu defeated, went to some of tbe
▼lllagse In the district and aatd that
•rwyoM wbo voted the right way
would bar* a free rail reed Ticket to
Athena and a ticket to tbe t bee ter.
Tbe Gntki art ortij for amuaraaati,
aod the bid gave her husband a Hat in
tbs Parliament. Every mao In Grueoa
h»* the right to vote. The member*
o« Parliament are elaoted much like
our Oougnmnnen. Their term* ar* for
four year*, and they receive salanea of
about MOO a session. They have more
Power than oor member* of Oongrace,
aod It 1* they wbo In reality gov
ern Greee*. It is they who will decide
ee to war* with Turkey, aod It Is from
them that tbe appropriations must
coma The King bee tbe right to veto,
but he would not dare to exercU* It
against e Urge majority. He It Just
as anxloas to be popular with his peo
ple as tbe rreeideot U anxious to be
popular hers, end be U pretty sure to
do ae tbe peopU want.
HOW TEL* Mini VOTX».
A political campaign in Graao* ia
vary much like a political campaign in
America. The Greek* ate food of
goo speaker*, and tbe men who can
make a good stamp speech stands a
chance of an election. There la eiuob
buncombe, of course, but tb* modem
Omsk* are Intelligent, aad the poorest
of them consider thenaanlrna oo an
•quality with tbe richest. The waiters
at the eafa and the driven oa tbe
•treat cere will talk politica with roc,
and tbe pqlHleian bee to do tbe remit
handshaking In Qreeoe that hs don Id
the United H tales. All of the eleottoue
ere held upon Sunday, end, curiously
enough, tbe poll* are la tbe churches.
In Athens you have to go to tbe
Cathedral to do your votiog. Tbe
voter* are all registered, end tbe elec
tion* ate watched much more carefully
in.Greece than they are bore. Every
candidate watches hie own bos, for
there la a ballot box for each candidate
Re does not do It In person, but kae e
Judge appointed In each district to Uk*
hi* place. Tbe ballot boxes are ar
ranged In a row along ooa aide of tbe
o ha rob. They are ao fixed that only
ooe man can pass through at one time
Each bog la about a foot square. In
IS.*?5. H"!? ,h ■ tfp* bole in
which Is Jost large enough to admit
the arm of n mao. This pipe ran*
down through the middle of tbe
box until it meet* a partition
which divide* the box in half? One
aide nf tbe box la tor affirmative ballots
aed tbe other for negative. Tbe bel
leU ere buckshot, and tbe voter having
K* down Into tbe pipe drops
i ballot for or against Uu candidate
•* be please* without the powttrillty of
anyone knowing bow be voted. Each
voter la given only aa many buckshot
a* there are candidates, and each Judge
oau Me that be has but one baUotTn
M» band before be put* it In tbe box.
There ere tew election frauds la
Greeee. It la almost Impossible to
•tuft a ballot box, and la eaes of the
bullets In the boxes do not correspond
with the registration at tbe entranew,
the whole vote is thrown out.
BiTi8r«ui«B tTnnun.
Wbeo 1 started tor Greece I er pea ted
to ftnd there * nation gone to saad. I
■» relod when l raaabed
4tbaoa. The Athene of to-day la a
modern city. It baa wide streets,
pared wilt oobbleatonm, tod Its
boutea are miieh like the Wires and
toar-etonr data of some parte of Parle
Ite peopta draeaaa we do. Than are
oamagsa with Ilfsrfed coachtorn and
there is aa asooh style la Athene as In
ear part of Bnropai Tbs bettor elaaate
of tba reodetn Greeks here aa good
fc«*L«d If0*** •* etooala
tbePaltod Mates. They are wall
dressed and wail adoaatod. The reoat
of there speak halt a doom different
toatnegaa, though French U (ha
•ecjertj Iwiguaga of tha Greek capital.
I**! ?*! drlrere who oouid speak
.Wi£s? s’«srs,£;,1s;
rs^aJssvssSss
3,000 atodadta sad which haeM pro
ftreere. Hare tha young Greek gate a
tborangh otaarteel adoeatloo, and he
can If bo wlahaa, add to it a coarse lit
tow, read Id aa, theology or phlloaophy
There ere, la addition to this, thirty
three other ooilagaa lo Qresow, coatola
lug ready 4,000 stodeato Tha klag
derebaaa system of ooamoa ashoots
at which attoadeaca li compulsory.
Thera are also a osaber of prime
eehooto aad In A than* I tern da tas
pdytosiiBis laatHata and aa aosdmny
oftatoasa.aara(algaod libraries aad a
lerpe uattooal maesam Thera was at
"bloh eoauioad 800
etodeata, aad Umre are girt*’ Rhode
la maay porta of Orases
Big Bargains
In Bill Heads.
Here are some odd lots of Statements and Bill to be
turned into cash during the month of March. There is a bargain
In every lot named, but cash must accompany order. We will not
set a type or turn a wheel on any job mentioned below until the
money fs in our hand.
-Bill Hearffl —-v
NUMBER Inches Wide by 91*4 Inches Long*
One Lot 300 for 81.30.-One Lot 500 far 81.15.
Neatly printed at above prices, but cask must come with copy.
NUMBER 4 Site, S t*i Inches Wide by 7 Inches Long.
ONE LOT OP 6,000—
PRICES : 500 for $t .05.
1,000 for 1.85.
Scatty printed at above prim, but cask must come wlik copy.
NUMBER 6—Sire. 8 i-a In. Wide by 4 54 In. Long-4 Lines.
One lot 1,000 for 81.33; or 500 for 80 cents.
One lot t.ooo for 1.30; or 500 for 80 cents.
One lot 1,000 for 1.50; or 500 for 90 cents.
Neatly printed at above prices, but remember cask must tome with copy.
Statements.—
SIZE-s H4 Inches Wide by • Inches Long—so to as Lines.
One lot 500 for 85 cents.
One lot 300 for 95 cents.
One lot 300, 4* wide by 8* long, s3 li«*, for %uoo.
One lot 500, 5X inches wide by 8 inches ton* 16 lines, blank
space top and bottom, for ft. 13.
Send cash with oopy. Prices like these for job printing are too
low to book, to bill, to go after, or to take any other chances on.
If you don't want to plank down cash with copy in order to get
theae bargains, just stand aside for the other men who will.
These bargains are going to go. Get them while you may—
and get them before April 1. We don't expect a one of them to be
left at that date.
QAZETTE JOB OFFICE, Qaatonla, N. C.
LAUD OV HAILBOAM AND f*L»
nwa.
I rode from A these down to tbe aee
oooet On e eteea tramway, nod I took
excursions out Into the country oc
•treat can. It named strange to we
In oocuing to Athaoe by carriage from
°wtbe road upon
which Hoioo end Beeop perfaape walked,
to be turned oat of Uu way by e etc am
Mooe cruaber, which wae maoadam
titng the road. I telephoned e nataber
ll““ ?oriog ay etay In Athene,
end et nlgbt ee I walked about under
lb* electric llghta I wondered bow
Dlogenee would look if with hie leatern
he ecuuld again bare seek for an bonnet
Tbe Greeks here as good a pos
tal eenrlce ae yoe will And nay where.
Ifaern are men* bock atone, and tbe
dlspluya of goods in the atom windows
are quite ae One aa those of any Am
erican eity of tbe not else.
QONT logs TARNrno.
A* for the bqeloses of tbe pwph,
tba pqra Greek does not take to agri
culture. There are fewer faraen
among the Greek nation than among
any other. Tbe moet of tbe people ere
la moroeotUe boeloee*, la the pro fee
eloae, or la ihipping, they are nator
•I tailors, and Greaoe probably bee
■tore taupe, In proportion to Iteelaa.
than may other nation fa tbe world.
They here qnlUa good little navy,
tome of tbe vessels beiog armed with
Kropp gone. They here 17 torpedo
boats, each oear 87 feet In length; a
doaea gunboats, three flrst-olase oral
■era, and ether eeasaU eaoagb to make
them qalte a formidable enemy for
1-add‘Uoato three, Greece
bee about 3,001 Bailing —mill and
with all parte of the Mediterranean,
griooe George, the eeeood aoe of the
Wf«, beerimwa remarkable ektU as a
■eOor. He bee frightened hie men a
oomber of times by bis darlag ways
of morleg nartl raaeata about.
Hot long ego ha was la eommaad of a
muboat wfatoh wae aonqlng Into tbe
araeae. As Urn teat geared the har
fcll -.TT. U*d t*w» wae a large
deal of debiag yeaaola at anchor there.
It |a usual qadcr each etreumeUnees,
toalow down to half speed, but Prince
George instated upon going ahead re
*• «>•** would go. He took
the wheel btraaesf, aod with tbe at
moet degterity gelded tbe g an boat
through the narrow pasasgoa between
tbe yemeto without eyen fonllag a
eable. white tbe oQoen end men looked
oa with mingled alarm end ed rat ration.
Priooe George la now V years old.
He is more than six feet la height, and
to hrare to tba extreme. It to proUbto
that be would like notoUre bettor tbaa
a naral battle with the Turks, and tbe
probability to that he would come out
llll^
in* BVintira of to* mutruox.
Kl*c Q«m baa dona a araatdaa)
to raatoro UmoM ruin* of Grace*.
Doom neintloin mn aadaat the
Pattkaaoa dorlof ay plait, aad th*
KIm aided le waanteg off mm of Um
miUi Min which wm lowed. Ua
la Ictaraaad aaw I* ban** UM Parte
aaoo ragatrad, aad tba 4a» aay yat
ooaa# *rtm wa win ha akta to look
opwa tkta (tractor* aa It waa la
tka Una
baawaaa,
I t ataa«to . o* Um top of th*
AaropoHa Tka AompaUa Uoa tka
add* ad tka aaw A thaw* Th*
Bodaro boaan of tka atty aUnk op
(ran tka kaaa of Ua aldaa. itlaanan
rooky bin. wblob rlaea straight ap {rota
Urn plain on which Attana la boat to
tba bright of about MO Ink. It looks
auoh itta aaMM sank of rosy tod
asarfala, with bore and there ahU of
grasa ora blood-nd pom peeping oat
of Ita eroriooa. Tba plateau upon tba
top of tha Acropolis oootalos, Ijadgo,
about 10 acres mod upoa it ia tha Par
thaoon. Too hare saao plotaroa of It.
Tbay do aut gtaw you otooh Idea of ita
teotp. Imagine a Const of graat
■srUa ooIukdo standing opoo a roand
marble floor tba ana of shlsb la al
moat an acre. Let aash coluan be as
big around aa tba larpaataai* wheat
yoa haao erer seen end let It rlsa up
wvda for S3 that la a beautifully
■TMaMtrloal form, let ttba fluted,
and lot Ita capital, rich in Ua plain
dorto graea uphold n wall of marble
around wblob rant a frtaas of tba most
wondtrfal sculptors of tba world, and
yon have the skeleton of the bclMlna.
Tba interior oootalas othar eoiamua,
and ayan In 1U rains tbe balldlag aa a
whole has a wonderful beauty. Tow
»*o It for [alias around Atbaoa and it
■tends owt before you as you oeme Into
tbo harbor at tba Ptraowa. At present
tba wall at one sod Is almost lntaet
save tba frlaae, which was carried off
£ Lord Elgin and which is now to
bs assn la tha British Uonaa la Lon
don. The Parthenon looks bast la tba
•racing. All of its raws bars tba
rish otdor of agt and tba oolumna torn
to Hirer and goU andsr tbs mya of tha
setting sao.
THY CUI N01X FOB HW THIHOS.
Tbo Gneka of to-day an prood of It
n ttay are of all tbalr old rain, bat
as tar aa I oould Ison thalr Binds an
■on In tba futon than In tba mil
Tbay ban not tba art title »~*tr ?f
Halt fatbars ud wbauspokaa to about
»■*, buttotho woodarfu! odnnao
■Ht that baa ban nada wttbia tba
last cmratlon. Tbay oonaldar tbsaa
Mlrasa atooac y~oi tatlo*. ratbar
ttanaa> qM oaa.aad Uiayaay Uat tbay
«®«* feE1" Ohm* V»» tba atataa
Uoaoa bald aaooaoftba Braatoouo
trtaa of tba world. Tbay ara nrnnt
la this determination and ban aa nod
bnloa n any paopta of tba world. Tbay
baya tba moanls aod oam wbtab safes
Mooaa*. Am St. Paul oaoa said of
tbo«: “Thn an aiw«*s aaakiac afUr
aootaiMw tblof,*'aod bo mint bars
addad hodba rWtod than fa tbiM
dan, wbau tbay lod It" "if Tarkay
toto badiridnd you nay bssaro that
tbaGnbka wtfl |ot aomatfeloc oat of
tba Isavlnga.
"qod am mum san.n
•am wm written, not aa It tawrit—
to the world* Book of UtL tot la
^.“TV*1 wtatak partatoo u
y»f* 1 found Blatter or two. a
KsirSTS&aar-s:
L®2 iW'.h«,»T;wb,r,f At at
Bread—to'gpraljr Oort. Than tea
baaatlfal Irlah ho— ..dad lu a
«r— garden that n— way down to
the rtrar and oo wbfah tteream aat
only —ay roan trace aad haaallfal
pleat* tot fruit treat, a qoarUrof aa
acra ot eUawtenr tod* aad raeptorry
aad emmet baaboowlltoata—hi.
®"» *o*»g to taU yoaabnwt
SSiTMSttt!wa%«
about tba womaa. Sha aaid to — at
too my drat, la tba toaniaat eort of
war “Yea, they call — tba Peek—,
baoanaa It woald to a pbyatoal lam.
albOlty for — to look raany doeb—
d— to deeb aad blood.” As too
laughed tbarer— bed— — the Duch
fwitotDo Meortor draw-Mg of bon.
Mdook
togtygowaad;wfcUetba womanatand
tof before — wee ateolotato liny;
aad too great qeantity eke poa—aad
waataottodlo—torn top of tor head
and brake away toto faonmating little
corli on bar forehead. Pi— andar
time looked oat two dart brown a—
long anrttog laabea that apertled aa If
dJIrttod^to all tba world rad all toe
people to It. Tba month «— aamlL
bet determined; and the wbola ex
°<„M" f— wna that of a
womaa of wit, of a went tamper aad of
»<wda— floods— nomahowe la a
face nol— IV rotate to tba aoal.
A TOtVUAU WMXTXa.'M HOWS LVtm.
I don't bailor* ht Duehoaa by birth
•nr won nob a crook oa dk tbia
Uttia hoaton of alao: It waa a taa
gown of toft, rich pioao, of
of brown you an In an sofauoa leat
aad abavt tba wrlsta aad aaak www
tba rafltoa af ran old Um, wblla tba
Uoy fast, peepiu to and oat from aa
darbar pottlooat, wan la jaatauah
bowttcbtni Loots Qalaaa ahoaa as
PbyMa, orMoUyBawn, or Lillian, or
Mr*, boaffrry would ban Jond la.
Iadaad, aa 1 raaaaabar bar, I think of
tha tiny Uttia atatoatta of Dnadao;
aad yoi bow bon abo was I Bba oar
ar toM aa of the dark days that eaaa
to bar. I board of than from otbar
poopU; that aha aurlod wbaa nry
youag and bar huabaad dlad la law
3yag%yajr>na
^oo«M«otd, aad wbaa^kSpmaof^S
book waa wrtttaa aboat bar, la lktt,
abo waa tba taatbor of ala snail paaplaj
ooo a baby aaDad ••Ton,” who waa
oalymnaroM. Ha waa oooot tha
sss.'Sfti.zsjrwr.cz
s-r.a.'ssi ars-fsrs
borgadaad IM, tad toady to ba
www ioooi nr laTOoori
aad U oar Una. Bat7 a
what tba lady at
•boot bar taa da
“Many yaara ago. ]
waa writing Phyfifc.
forswhflaaad wait __
tha boon of cm af ay aoat lattaato
Maada. Jaataalwaa gaiagtoaatar
tba duwlagnoa mj boot nw aa,
oa forward, wand tba r-Ym
away, aad hinaalf aaaoaooad aa to
tba gontaaK
“ ‘Bar Oraoa, tha Oaahaaa.*
“Haaaldthis wttbgrowl aotaaraitr,
aad aa aU at aa know aaab otbar wall
than woo a gran daal of laagMarmd
fan aboat n, Thao aaawbony look It
a» tad nld that UaMtla wafl baaaaa
•magaB praatorlV ‘aTmdb I foot
aad at that tlasa waa nay aaadar. it
waa probably fooliati, ran frinloaa,
bat wo wan light btartad. all you#
togaUar, aad a faugh aaaaaad tba nry
ban tbkag that aoald bag pa ■ aa. go
tblaaanawaa pat oa tba krai ahaaB
ffTbyrna,* aad than abaata warp aaot
ss-BVaSrcS^S
aot raaogalaad. 1 waa lk yaara oM
wb>« 1 hagaa to wrfta ragwUriy, aad I
hanaont atapgad. I bon wituoa
r oanfo ana sag aankar of abort
owm way, 1 ban namgafb? aaka S
^^^T i'a^Tai *****
**The DmIm1 workafcoa woald
uawran—at work, aUboowti a mat
qaaautarofUUta. there, iagfea
IP** aod the kf in aa It
to. Good _
aad tee bite of
ISWasWSSSTMS
UkntttMaiii uSZ
s&Si&iBr-lSf&Si
kteenrtaw, tor I have never ora^
•OMaMimt of mlllrlaw aadaa
aaah arrtvaa I flinch, like the coward
»ad.’ Do *oa woe
dwttotl wanted to tan teak the
ahato'dS&.’tta ^ uv
“J Wit iW, tha weeMaTwbe
ssamse;
tte teen of the child re. worotfteoor
saiwwsr&iSwft
lotm*
rowmrtvl nrxmci of oood
books.
I don't mppow tbaDoobm’ —n
ffi^T3g.?*uiBr*jr3S2
ttal haraaif. I kaow than am fn‘j
of erlUaa who marl at bar aadaajbar
book* ora “VxaUy-gooOj.” I*tf rathor
."[IV^?*"?*”**** that only
tutftiraakortUam tkaa writobafl.
bitter om that, tooooaa of Um malm
In Urna-wontm toewar. I&Ukl
“ apeokkijt for a wood many womoo
wbN I aay that U to iliriata to
Md^nb'ToMMtuStlPto mom ut£
?**»« >• mad of tba boyoettlcg Id
Rnmmojai tkaa to arnica oaa*a aaK
wrafatol omtboplaya oftkaaatl
after all, to wmtek tbo ftrad ‘
of olomatory, tba aatoSS a at
owl, or tbo Moanh of , om
▼loo, la plaoaaatar tkaa to aoaTtaoa
oaoWmUof tba dagtadatlon ofwomao
» *•*?*** D0^5*-0.«i*« tow
araey afmoraoau ptetamt by jfor
[ tba
I
k
I
I
I
that, irklla tbay^ioiaraak ■V'do' aaO
borrow oo or moko m Ttilnbal [
tkiak thta ttofly lltUo »
snar^sra._i
daolk la tbo want thlaa tkot ooa oomo
to ao. Of bar m mm* tbot lapW
“S22!!5fuw“t!?iJ5u5
s^i-istss-tSr-srn:
stffSS'sas.ai.isa
^Ur^fSTl, M tHtfiMtei
SSIHiSrSaHS
BIGGIES.
T*> laorta* oar riaot o« BUG
OIM, SUBUZl m4 hacks, w
WIU make apaatol taw print to to*
trato to taUjpat M April GUST.
CkfcatMto Mi at oar pm aai
gripriHfc
TaarciapMttkS,,
sauar. vaqnnna * oo.
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