_CAPE MAY STAR JSS) Lavon Saturday, January 11, 1919
p * "Ayruac). ." n" | Aeemed the Crampton place. And the , Senet ie hits Suaaned | boute was a little, seamy-fuced. , fr wag etig 4 inyed, older son of the noll anne s o ie win ae ak to the _ altar. f: ‘Silew,‘th ‘the‘ Hight -of. the oun, adircrcidf t gession, ang Ole Hen, trandtéi in oo o e with . baray banda. out:
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1M) t | "he ai thi.i1 Mimi ropitl| p Ep E & I I if d F d d iof charts . and . beauty. seemed to sense bis stare, for whe with dancog fire, full upon him and ghen reh up to him. "Dick 1" mhe cried, delightediy, and ghen, for some unsceountable reason, she checked herself, . The same feels Sog of restraint that marked the others‘ attitude. foward him came over Mer, and he noted the change in her sone, with disappointment, as | she dded, "What brought you down from city?" / "The. wedding," he aniwered, with m grave mile, still holding her soft te hand. "I-I couldn‘t mies it. wand then, too, I was bongry for a wight of the old place. Haven‘t seen Ut tn rtx yearn." Twenty minutes later, Dick, still feeling | lonesome, . detached . himself from the group about the newly-wedn land cought out Marian. . An ever at leader, he found her now among group of the younger folk, Introl@uctions followed, and then he mon mged to drow her away from the jgrowd, rensing their resentment as (he did wo.
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‘A ‘Berious Coniagrati ‘"t was the day after muse Dicuic and Hogan was in a bad . clan, murther, Honora," he groaned, Era me tmaoides that‘s burain‘ up insotzely." "D‘ve think, Mike, tat FidFwe &‘ fotre &nder contPor wi peat?" aiked Mre. "Ot dunn," said ropan, way It would help to wet rulna." was pongramgam A S0
"That of a walking gentleman." i Pulling the Box. . Central-Ie this an Important call Mr. B {in his office)Buperimportant! I always have to report to my wife when I start for funch and immedintely on my return. She posttively won‘t stand any nonsense from me. Getting Data. June-Then you think be hosn‘t the nerve to propore? Jane-Yes: axing pa‘s income and : ma‘s disposition and my age seems as far ms he dares to go--London An awere. Hubby‘s Income. Mother-Whit is your husbend‘s income now, Snraht Married Doughter-Well, its um: ally between one and four ofclock in New York Morning Tel His Query. "What are you waiting fort" "Oppertunity. to turn up." "Where did you get the idea?" "What Iden i _ "That opportunity bad been burled face down." bnonblicesd "Aren‘t you in fwvor of the uplHRtF‘ | inquired the philanthropist. "Yes," answered the profiteer; "but don‘t you think we‘ve boosted the price togs about as high as the public will [stand for?"
ie N o C ( iaaied _L_LLLL T TT LLTT A Mighty Oak Has falten. It is only a "statement of fact to say ‘that the Feo of Theodore Roosevelt brings sorrow into more Fees ican homes than ‘would the passing of 1 any "otner man i of his day and generation. The most human man in Amer‘itan public life, his activities aroused ‘ many snimositics, (ro often there‘ was love‘ for him‘ lihnead there ‘was not Kgvecinent t Tle ~ Wiways he was Areday. lid ‘re lontand the prey of America ‘and ‘ipotie ‘from tt. To his credit stands Auch sthievehent‘for the yeey s fone greater than that- whith resulted fromm rome and forceful Insibtence‘ that "the ‘Republic ‘must stand right on the pt issue foreed upon ‘the ‘world by Germany‘s onslaught upon liberty ahd civiliza‘tion. "In those trying days of neutrality, when the minds ‘of many men as patriotic as he were confused, he saw straight ‘and furnished the ‘American people the | Pr Peo Lod bind needed ‘and craved for. He saw etc a Te canism means and Is, lag his ‘strength wit : the people "hever was reater thin after August, ‘ots, for in His hew aree ‘preachment of a‘ virile (2 / caniism he was reflecting Horou Lop Cucot 104 biind American heart. dural dis taf rhe InFrmecin tall ole Tails ins drm ike oie sie mm man and ae ond sh ane an an an m G a vip ® 5 Pee ad hiical held aiilfist Theodore ‘Roosevelt that Emitted Kimeott to be iwayed by the heart rather | than by the ‘head. ‘Against ‘that charge c he needs no defence; mankind is so ‘swayed. t (3 20 hated he‘ also was loved as few men were loved. Rr ® aa c a d will m |of4 d place. Poe e t e Pn oe eee ets a long period of public activity, and the record will be a notable one, for it is to be borne in mind that although the span of his life was not so great as that of many men & ~ F 3 B i ] 20 B | 3 P a f — $ a p [- 7 a $ a fug br oa sor‘ sh e he was prominent in the public affairs of city, State and. / nation during a longer period than any (2115 a BL dLO #00 day, probably longer than any other American since the early days of the Republic. The cold judgment of history has little interest, however, to those of us whose lives have been lived alongside his. — Our judgment of him is the warm judgment that comes from the heart. — We loved him even when we differed with him and to all of us-from one end of this land to the other-his death is a personal loss-N. Y. Herald. on tms an ins wih id me mm mn mon on ns mms m mes om ma mos ons me oe i h ad ma m mn

