To EdlUi'a tanrm rjrt «'U • most faartoatlog place. TUr frUr. rolllac Wrrtrt..-. of |.laln. Bat and
a Its Miaaovs sat HaiTT. pale, calmly amokln*. ontU be y w the i tied eyes of tbe irtrl. Edkb fire
bo tl me for qoetUons
lae would do aomelhla*! Harry glauced Ui ar
way at bis ankle, about wblrb be bad aarkwardly tied a handkerchief. “An my own carekwaueM." he aaM. -J stood In tbe saddle to look for tbe herd and If the blamed little Imp didn't bock wltho-t a word of warning and threw me. I'D never bear the end of this at tbe ranch. First horse that's
five years, They'!! And
while. They
THE EVIL EYE.
IS scornfully. -What.“ she bad exclaimed when her alstrr-tn-law bad slyly remarked on tbe regularity of Kdltb's moraln» rides un-
is -Blehaea 111.“
There are several paaaaifiw In Shake spearr's play of "Richard III." which, taken In connection with an anclfht tnie-rstlUon rife In tbe England of EllaalH-tb Indeed, still Oourlahlnc In many parts of tbe continent and even Iliurerlui: here and there In oar own land yet—mem to Indicate a probability that tbe dramatist meant na to understand that Richard, aa conceived by him. pnssrarril the (lower of “fasclna ’ I lion" tlirougb tbe evil eye. It la true f Dial Khakeetieare dura not say tbla In so many words, but tbe fact of the I prevalence of tbe Iwllef In tbe evil ey*
moaned. “Oh. you poor, poor boy:" . m day would render It unneceaaary Harry looked at her closely Tbep be for bm, to do more than hint at or leaned forward and quietly took pus > „ cs . nI lt nlld , far atronger argussaslar of her band. otent laViplanatton of bu not making
"Edith." be said aoftly. ‘‘Edith, do
oo care?"
Edith looked out Into tbe dusk -A cowboy." she thought. "Just a plain would they say?" Then
it this pretty Mia. Alcott bad laugb-
Tea." abe half whispered,
afraid 1 do. You see. I always said I d rer marry any hot a college'inan." •la that ao?~ chuckled Harry. "Well, you're keeping your vow. I bare a sheepskin kicking around In my staff
“My dear child, when, you com* west you must forget that you were bore and bred. I did ko tire years ago. The .fact that you are a college girl won't
i od of saddle riding. These westerners don't give a rap concerning your par ents or your grandpa rent* Their In-
ter/ Ho leeve off your airs with Harry Ksterly. They are quite ksrt on him. I assure you." Edith listened In silence to Mia. A1 con and watched her aa she moved
tar chin and with a disdainful little sniff walked oat toward the corral, where Marry Estrrly a waited tar. Harry watched tar keenly aa ata strolled slowly toward him. | -Cad." be said to him self, lota's well pot opr
t Edith's face against
velocity with which
Is very great, and they sometimes
extend ores a space several times as
large aa the whole of the earth's
fare. In common parlance they
I "son spots." but ss they n to bare a rotary mutton
actly similar to terrestrial cyclones
they may be regarded aa
Inrat astronomers that these sun storms move with the astonishing velodty of 130 miles per second, and in best form an adequate coo cep ttou of what tbe force of such a storm mst be by comparing It to an earth Ions moving at 100 miles an boor, which Is Indeed a terrible brnricanu Carilngtou and Hodgson, the English
and bevy matter
not lews than auO.OuO miles abot
l’a disturbed surface!
for. But really. MUa Alcott I Ihlak Jo - * cradle.” p on the saddle g away Harry's herself Into the -This morning." be said. “I'm going
Edith looked. Tb *avs a tarprtslug s< far ranch bouse, with tbe distant graslug herds, the bine line of base that marked the mountains and. farther still, the brown of Into tbe Woe of the
It Harry
"Mlsa Edith." be said. "I believe that weU have a dust stuns tan In boor or wo. Tbe air felt like It morning, wttk this scorching wind, now I can see It gathering out then the desert. 1 wonder If you would be willing to ride In to the ranch while 1 ride out to apeak to Mr. A1
puttr
Edith blushed a little "Why.
Mr. Brtecly, I, will bock." “Why. she's a
jack rabbit Of o
be'a all rl
“Hcaac!" pleaded tbe girl. Harry lumped from bis bores a tallied Edith from tbe saddle “let me change saddles ifclckly." ■aid. “WeTe no time to waste. ' A In a few mlnutre Kdltb was canterlnr swtflly toward the ranch boose. Harry rode out toward the d! herd. Half an hour after Edltb'reacta
breaking point Edith at
dust sift la through the dosed wlodoa and under the doors, finally ah preached Mr. Alcott who bad cui Just after the storm broke. “Has Mr. Eaterly come In?" atu rd. -taould you mind looking, Jim myr Mr. Alcott sighed patiently and went
teltant direct would be found common |icr>usslon that attaches so many folklore auperatUlons that « daugoroua to mentior u hla rsl or uncanny things by
Harry looked up
4d me!" Edithfcxi surprise. “Ore,"
obliged t
ijUcmv of Ibis tbi self believed In U
it purjse
i. and for
oes not math-r
wbctbi-r
Ss be knew, that mo» formed his audiences believed Ip It For his rads tin- notion would tare s striking dramatic value, and It would also b<-lp to rxidaln tbe extraordinary way In which Richard ''taadnated'' first Ann and then Elizabeth Immediately after baring wrought them seri-
ous Injury.
To turn to the passages In question. In 1. U. 45 (Globe texti Ann Nerll any s with reference to Gloucester, "\tort: I eyes cannot endure tbe devil/* Tbe word "devil* tare would have In this case not a general, hot a special a|c propria tenon*, since ixiwacsaors of the evil eye were supposed to have qulrcd that mischievous organ, with Its powers of la-wltchmrat, through a compart with 8*tan 1. U. TH. routabo tbe word Infectlou." afiplled by Ann to Gloocewter. a term regularly uw-d of tta evil eye. lu I. II V0. we find tbe phrase "devilish slave" used to Glooccs trr by Aim. This, viewed la the light Of tta other passages we are dealing with, may allude to Gloucester's pact with the devil, whereby be tweame his agent or "bell's factor to buy souls" (TI. It. 72i. In pursuit of which Imslne*a tbe evil eye Irfwtowed on him by Satan would ta Invaluable lu attracting and ~faarlnatlng"i-uatu<nera. Again.
In L H. 144. Ann splU at Gloucester. It rTr**T!‘ m T '.TiTiT I Is neetllesa to remark that freui tta Hi!?'/!!/!;!-*« i» .n -o-
all iwoi.les one of tta coanmOtat antidotes to “fascination- (tta technical term for tbe actloo of tta evil eye) or other evils waa despuere malum. In I. a 140. we have the a.cusetlon again burled at Gloorester liy Ann: “Out of my sight! Thou dost Infect mine eyes." In I. 111. 225. we find another ai-cuare In
Queen Margaret, who. to
aaym. “That deadly eye of thine." — - - the Ductasa of Toek,
ral In _
longevity and remarkable fie the nar In wbk-b It baa been employed to lab tta different families or |“^
rival of tta ordInary "
FISHERS AND OMENS.
Hons among fistarnw il luck canard by w.o sf 8k»4f a woman .
p Inc
' ONE OF EGYPT'S MYSTERIES
Collector’s Sale of Properties
doomed. At KUml*>ruuA England, If a woman hapjieiw to rater a cottage wtau tta men are preparing their Hues she Is not allowed to detain nulll she baa knelt dow-u and repealed tta laird's Trayer. lu Lapland tbe n*J«-nnen ivold *|*wadlns tbcj- .iiptuird fi*b on
' v rmiabuled by •ap.-lltlciil would
part of t
gustos, who ulways wore a belt of B*-ni i i fur TIi* Idcn aree from the faie-y , tbuudcratornia Tta crab was tellei ed . , by the auelents to grow only during the ( waxing of tbe mora. and tbla la still a I eurrvtit Is-lief. it*- writer having found It'In various parts of this country, par 1 tlralarly In Alaska. This seem- to '■ have more foundation than tta tvllef that In thunderstorm* lotatera cast I their large .-uttiug claws. Tlie brain i of tta cari> was supposed by ibe an clouts to grow- and diminish as the . mono waxi-d and waned. 1‘earli were aup|s>sed to be sea dew wiil.-b tbe oya-
For Unpaid Street Assessments on the Ocean Front ■ and Other Properties Hereinafter Particularly*
THURSDAY, the Twenty-third Day of Auffufit.
.f tta «•
! u
cborcb
with the words (addressed to tareelf In reproach for baring brought Into tta world such a monster aa Richard). "A cockatrice bast thou batch'd to tta world, whose unavoided eye la murderous" The tallefa (bout the fatal glance of tta oockxbloe are too well known to kfiWTtnto and are In them■elves outside tta scope of this Dote, but It should not ta forgotten that tbla taaat also Infected" tta air around IL
md Queries
hit plaid, tta highlander
king mist and violent i _y 0 ^ l
prepared to paaa tta
night In defiance of lbs most Inclement, A * ter. while tta loose undergarment | Two genOrmeu were traveling In I bare ta*u dUBcnlt »-Improve qo, of 0*- bUI counties of Kraux-ky wbra wading moonuln torrrata „„ „„ npWntkjo for pitch pine. steep skies of ravins ^ TbrJ . had t¥ * n dr i,| I1 g for two hours without encountering a human being, when they came In sight of a cabin In tdwswla awd a«r. I a clearing. It waa very atUL Tta bogs somewhat careful study of lay where they bad fallen, tta tblu tta Bterary characteristics of Abraham c iay bank mule graied round and Lincoln and John Hay. as well aa of round In a m*t circle to save the natural dispositions, | trouble of walking, and one loan, lank Leslie'a Weekly is led to remark tbe man. whose garments were tta color ss between three two celebrated of tta clay bank mule, leaned against They were both humorously In- 1 a tree and let time roll by , Lincoln In his somewhat homely “Wonder If ta ran *>rak?" said one way. Hay In bis more cultured style, traveler to tta otber — - o clothe his Ideas—al- "Try him." said bis companion ways notably permeated with charity- The two approached tta man. whose simple, logical English On yellowish eyes regarded them without special occasions each tree to ix — , ““"
rsalon lu voicing
thoughts. One may aleieee conclude that Hay was tta perfected type cruder personality and that aa a disciple of ble great leader, with > closely associated In matlve days, ta bad oonadenaly or unconactonaly Imbibed poly bis maater'e style.
tta Hawaiian Island* a men have pni«red tta (1 billet of wood need ■•
IU power, and tbe kahuna torverrr) would have to go through tta o|-ora-
tion again
Tbe Influence of tta- minister la bard ly less adverse than that of women, and tta pravtlcra noted a« connected with tta 111 oracie of feminine Interference apply also to tta clergy. Tta herring are said to have all left one part of tta Irish .-oast t-crauae they beard tta- new parara say lx- was going to tithe tbe fiatary. and in Lapland and on tta coasts tlx-roof fi»h ore never looked for a here a church la In sight On tta const of Ijincashin-. England, the flstamicL have a rastom of setting sail on Sunday. A clergyman of tta town mice prayed against this breach of tta Lord's day. aa ta called It; but to neutralise bis prayer*, tta- flatarmen made a small Image of rarri and pious-
ly burned tta parson In etfigy.
Tta arotdaiire of tta nelghlawhood of churches referred to I* accounted for by tta fintarnicu's belief In tb*
great quickness iff taarin In Sweden, for tostau-e.
bells are not rung In ttxi br.-ain season, lest tlx- fish should take fright, and where tta ptVbar* are flalietl tta people are no less careful of their oenriTta Rom*ns believed that tta serrated spine on tta tall of tta sting of causing lujnrf to even vegetable and mineral substances, trees losing thrlr verdure an.l even rock* being affected. They also loosidered It bad luck If a person with a love or laweutt
I-erch under hi* arm and tta Judge would thereupon become hi* friend. i-atrfa certain s(<eciro of flat flab tbe Finns make the algu of tbe Tta- Irish will not ret tta skate, -ailed tta maid. 1-coauae It to bear a qucsttouable reto some of tta grotesque mediaeval drllnretluna of tbe Virgin Mary. Tta Hutch fishermen tallcve that tliey cud discern tta Unage of tta of tbe dram, nud tbe Swedish flttartucn brOcve that tbe
1 tbe shore
on SL Gregory's day. March 12Tta origin of certain apeclea of fishes re to Is- accounted for In various ways. When tbe Brittany fiabannen happened to catch tta lotte they threw supposed to turn Into eels. In parts of England eels are anpi-osed to ta n tbe months of May Ibec aectlou* from tbe r klne which droj- into drinking trough* and springs and there quicken after rain. This latter auix-retltlon 1* widely prevalent In this country. The ancients
t drank lo ai ^
I tta sun shone on them. 1
and tbra they hardened. It waa sup I-used that on cloudy night* tta oyster ‘ secret-sl dark |«-arls and on iiKM-nllgtit* *
Igt.t* clear white i-enrla
Tta Japanese fisbcraien rarely If rer utllixi- tta turtles taken In Ihctr ‘ tlx-lr tack*, turn ttam loose. Il I* ta- 1 lleved that a turtle so treated will : guide the fistarmau tack to bind 1 ■liould ta ever ta lust at ara.—New 1
Tork Tril-tm.-
It> wen known, aaya tbe New Tork Ireohig Post that Franklin made a particular atndy of raids and bod hia theory about ttam. which we tala pretty much the theory of toOnc of bla aaaertlous waa that catihlag cold does not come from mere old. but from unequal* temperature rer the body And from undistributed Kdature To prove tbla be made a umber of observations on occasiojs rtoeo ta did and ffSI not suffer. A few f three follow: By putting co a damp shirt on a dry
r said.—Reader.
e locomotive and attach It to the if the train, oo tta theory that tbe train couldn't possibly run -over a row and that a cow might stray Into tbe door of tta ^pst coach and bite
lets the body ten By alttlng In a room where (be floor as been newly wasbed-yre. \ By golnc Into a river and staying
Recently tta London Morning IW sontalued tta following advrrilartnrat: nurse for night duty
This called forth tta remark from he British Journal of Nursing: "To bottle Ha blew? How Is It done Lnd for what purpose are these ■nU used wbra -bottled r "
a Brian i mo,. “Tour sou. I tallcve. ma'de sum perlmcuts while al college?" "Tea; be dlacorensl what ta call* bl^wleutitle paradox ‘ " ^Wiat la tlx- milm<- of Itr* "He sueceedej in ib-moustratmt debts arc expanded by coutractliig
•wy sue (e-utc-l "Hiater-was gol W.4dt married today and tare lota fBn! And do# that man's taken ta>
' remarked tta southerner
"Fur them the! likes IL” “Lived tare alt jour life?” Tta southerner s|-at pensively lu the
•atnetyjy a row"I saw a man run dow n by a locouxx Ire once.” said a melancholy stranger. "It was on tta road from rarboodale to Sclgel. At Rlehlan-I ube man decided to get off tta train and walk. He proceeded shoot fifteen miles wtau tbe train overtook him. Ur waa knock ed down, and the train. In a leisurely sort of fashion, proceeded to run over The man spoke a few words and expressed tta wish that (5.000 accident Insurance that ta carried ta given to sweetheart Rot tbe [-oar girt never got tta money Ref-re tta engine got up to tta msn's knees rheumatism ael In. and the pow fellow died a natural death It taing an a-cldrat policy, the Iri couldn't C-Jevt tta money " Kan is City Star. Stranger (aarvasticallyi-Are you tl. ■ooa here? Office Roy-No; there's -n Ktar office hoy above me.-New Toe
Mr. Bnagsl-y (rummaging li Maria, this I* a ix-w bat. ta-'t don’t you wear It? it looks b anything you have worn tb Urw. Soagaby- Tbafs n.y oh blew off my bead tta otter
Mias Wilbers lobowlug i-botugrapb berarlfi-rni afraid If* rather fkd* Sinks (inrxperirarcrl. aged nineteen} Tea. but It's Just like ybo.—Loudon
hairs of horses cm
mud or that when tired of living rubl-ed themselves against tta r and from tlx- detrilu* la*u-d a while still otltt-re lettered they from tta c-areasace of antfrnl Holes, aceonllng to tta French Hdx-
' from prawn* Tbe Kai think that tta pike !
begotten by tbe wc-st wind, while tl gudgeon Is tattered to ta gene rate
from the -rplus of boraes tta teeth of fish you .
ir lock will ta bad u
I'lns
found In church make good fish hooka, u Scotland a quarrel on blood la drawn, will drive tbe tarring from tbe coast for tbe rest of tta * wIn Sweden stolen 'tackle la Inrky. -rtb C.-ni:auy tarring* eaten on New Tear's day bring luck all the y*-a« through. To witness tta plunge of a pike t-efore noon was eonsl lervl au Bohemia In N'otr
fish yo!l doj't
you throw It lu before It will tithe htber fish what you are doing
o more will bite
The Hawaiian fl-bc-nnen * imetlnx-a repare a tall from tta flesh of the -I-us awl tta Juke fr-tn tlx- bio** f tta lllma plant An exact numl
re employed tl
rk-l-ops tlx- salt
. Tta ci
due U|.-n ew. il I”' Irari ..r pwrecl .X Iswl -» 1-oelasHer -leslgosteS lum, I
of tl
acked tta buma
a. being j so* whioL ]
aany a
pertenred hunter. I ■olonel Evans It provefi to be the mnktflk of a repntatlon. In Ullnola named Wheeler had never fired a gun. One winter, however, be beard so much talk about sport of hunting tba> bit ambition became excited, and. borrowing a gnn. be started ont. Wtau be came tack be brought a magnificent buck." shot by himself square In the middle of tta forehead. He said little about hit achleremrat. but got tbe credit of be-e-rack shot, a reputation which, although ta went hunting no more, be
held f<
Jecture and baa been attributed to minute organisms contained in the aalL Whatever Ir- origin. It fade, us tta salt of tta impneoixsl --olur is Indescribably
lovely
To get an entirely different phase of
day ta told bla story and x- as a sportsman. •ra a doe drinking out of. a foot of a bluff a boat twra ty feet high With wiki excitement be lo bis shoulder, shut bit teeth and pulled tta trig ■atonlabrerat ta saw tta doe bound away tuihurh while at tta inx- time a glorious buck pitched headlong from tbe bluff Into tta creek tone dead. The buck bad l-ecn looking down.jat' tta doe. and Wheeler bad not sera I. but his shaking gun sent Its
a ti
errand.
Tta Japanese are ruthless In ttalr tampering with nature. If they decide that they want a bird or an animal of a certain shape or color they aet about manufacturing tta article, so to apeak, by tta exercise of exceedingly clever Ingenuity and untiring pa Hence. Here, foe example, ta bow tbe while sparrow s are produced: They select a pair of grayish birds and keep them In a white cage In a white room, where they are attended by a person dressed In white. Tbe mental effect on a aeries of generation* of bird* results In completely white bird* They breed the domestic cock with enormously long tails after the same principle. They first select a bird with a good talk giving him a very high perch to stand on; ttan with weights they drag tta tall downward, carrying on same system with tta finest specimens of hit deamidanti till a tall alraos long as a peacock's Is produced at
way Here right qnd o Marrotls. where the 1
lug blti* I-
Home families make It a custom to rtalt tta photographer's yearly, all go tag togrttar to alt for portraits singly or in group* It I* a good custom, but has to ta strictly obeerved or It begin to ta honored in tta breach. One family permits no postponement o yearly trip to tta photo gallery. A day ta set. and every one must go. Tb* are no penalties for nonattendance this family reunion before tta camera, because there are no Infringements of tta rule. Tta custom began with this family many years ago. when tta baby came to It Today It baa a 1-lete pbotctcrai-hlc record of family life for almost a generation. Home of tta children are married and are photographed with’ ttalr own children, while death baa made vacancies ta tta la tar groups.—New Tork Press
i Tta finest ruble* are
Asia. The (.rent Mogul had MB Urge ruble* ta bis throne, and among them was one weighing two and one-ba!f ounces. Of Kuroi-ean rubles Char lee
tta Bold, that luckless
lima is father, tad three rubles called tta Three Brother*, of perfect color and worthy aiie. They |>asaed ' posses*lou of Jaine* I . who a« to “Baby itiarles " There la a Urge heart aliaped tsila. ruby ta tta English crown It lisa l-ecn neither dot putlatad. Is only semitransparent
and U of a dark red. like cherry. Austria tad. or baa Ul ruby tta alae of a tan'i
Quern Elisabeth showed Blr James Melville one aa big at a racket ban Bunjeet Singh tad a Urge ruby with tta names of many kings engraved on IL Among them waa that of Aurang-
Many of tta English fishrpnen will A klQ< ^ i' ars u had one which
ny on* mention* a [*. prlxrd at ttavalua of A city or even they are halting their line*. a kingdom. It waa a table ct
Should they meet a hare on the way to ' jui.j. of . bcamiful color of al k-aat
their boats they will give np fishing f»r ! eager's breadth the day. In Scotland the salmon Is j ■ equally unmentionable and U afioded 1 u-i s«ds Bath*,
toooly as Bo-andta'a AM. Cauallj It
recelvea for a pseudonym the name of >rr Ut( . u tta ux collector of tta nearest village, i job t^fun as ta la generally tta one least liked. | >(W ^ M ' In tta HawalUn UUmU wlx-n tta , li>kl w>1 . >Ild |ni „^ ataafauei are ready to embark ttav a re .. twenty mini
Baheaxura are ready to embark they greatly exaa|s-rated ahould a [araon come along and stand indolently gating (at them with bla hands behind him, aa they bclirw It give ttam bad luck. The -arl-onew, or otollita. of tta lake (ram are often carried aa amulets by tta negro fishermen and other* of tta south and are also prinsl by tta boys sf M'Ucunaln and elsewhere In tta west who call ttam “lucky stones, - perAps In alloaloo to tta fact that there marked by a figure which re sembles tta letter L. The New Eng land fishermen carry a lucky bon* which they find In tta head of the rod flab. It 1* atall-llke and narrow, with a length of three-fourth* of as Inch. The edge la notched, while tta color U a pearly white. Many of ttam cooalder II a good pUn lo carry two bone*, aa that will make ttalr lock doubly aura, hut they l-oth should ta from tta
bead of tta same fish.
water from time tcold cream ■liould order to replace tl*
rwr the body foi lea. keeping u( addition of bol
• >:sglas4.
:bc family crest nade for tar let-
and waa having a die
tbla .crest on your stationary If you were English.'' said tta atattoner. “There I* In KngUnd a lax of (5 a year “Ho few people are entitled crest, tlxxigh." she said. "I shoe think such a tax would bring In the
English got
‘The Us brings In (350.101 a year.” replied the stationer. There 000 English with crests on tl
Imiltudc. i an Englis
whk-b all
lighted up by tta setting sun tta coloring rails to uilu.1 tta western a Indowa
f Magdalen i-ta|*-l.
tpix—cent. A* tlx- salt Is formed by vJ^-oratMNi. It la only during the hot ummer nionths that tbla ran Uk* Uce. and with tbe fir*t autumn rain tie picture fades away and the spark-
ptocU graidi
lake of blue. -Tamdon Tel
ad-lr- s- to ltin ehCandida i •- for the otfi.ask your vote* These are my reasons why you should give them to me: Not counting six years devoted to tta a<^ qulreturat of an islurati'-n. four years paastsl In [NTfunnlng tta dutlee of a notary andjx-veu years aa an em|>loyi-e of tlx- gfvenimraL I have worked ten hours a dny for twenty year*. That make* n.itai tHHir* fsnring this* twenty year* I wrote P«- volume* and 35 play*. I>f each of the 4<*' volunx-s an average of l.iMO nqilra have ts-en prtntial and aoki al .'»-franc* each. The 35 play* liave eaeh been l-rtformed on • h*! times. My hooka --rd 1 LH53.UUO franca: Iny play* have produced Ojm.OOO franca. Taking 3 franc* a day as tta average pay ol 300
YOUIVG’SS I* I 15 Hf
have [
iiity yea!
wage* of 0H2 [“'-pie and my pb
wagra f-s- ten yranpuf
tta last figure muet ta multiplied by 3 to Include tlx- provinces, making LQU. and adding To for the ushers, chiefs of tta claque nud cab driver* make* e to Ul of 1,45k Play* and hooka, then, have paid tlx- w ages of 2.100 people for all these y-nr*. not >»UBtlng Rclgli pirates and fnn-lgn 'trnnslatora." Y
A North 1 'arullna .s-ngresaman telto of a visit to a court In hi* native atntiwhere pnhlir l-uslncxa waa nearly In-terrupt-sl by tlx- cracking of peanut id to lx- rating the toothsome -goo
Finally the Jmlge lost bis
and a:
for a While, when suddenly rami loud pop The offender waa bruu before.tlx-bar. reprimanded and Hi “Tom- honor- I.-gin tbe man li tone of bumble ai-olugy, “I did mean to offend again*! the dignity of tta court. I beard what your b ■aid about not popping pranou. Indeed, air. 1 did not violate tta co order." “What In thunder, then." roared Judge, "were yon doing to produce that Infernal disturbance If It.wasn't pci nut*?" “May It plreae your honor. It waa pecan" »At this the Judge nearly fell out i his chair, and the crowd Indulged I roar* of laughter. “My fri-txl." Bail] the Judge. *M I
Clerk. al-,.-r rating [xs-a
licking, and Ihen th
n*-I>o you think you o.uld live on love alone? she r d like U try It awhile. I've never bad anything but
SI t-S-dsu- 3 w '■) u. ■
NICHOLAS CORSON. Tax Collector.
iS^Fiaewn
Mary Haroru,
NICHOLAS CORSON, Tax Collector.
OCEAIN CITY, IN. J.
MIUH-CI.AKS VAUJOUVIL.UI2 WEEK OF AUGUST 20, 1906 x—
CURTAIN RISES AT 8:30 SHARP. Admission, ^ . . 10 Cents. A few Reserved Srau 15 Cent* Extra. / CMAMOE OF Bite EACM WKtfK. - I . T
BEAL ENT ATE AIJIOlTN. WM. LAKE, C. E., swUnTSSS Fnblle, Master la IXsmkw V. CORSOH Keal Uastate —-A-»TID— LICENSED AUCTIONEER, No. 721 Asbury Aoenue, Ocean City, N. J
R- CURTIS ROBINSON Conveyancing 3 Insurani NOTARY PUBLIC AND COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS Nos. 744-46 Asbury Avenue OCEAN CITY. N. J. O-Money to loan on Bond and Mortgage.-

