The Kershaw gazette. (Camden, Kershaw Co., S.C.) 1873-1887, April 22, 1874, Image 1
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CAMDEN, S. C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22^ 187*. ~ M NO. 29.
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\ TMJROUGH Tttit BROKEN rATH.
J ' Owen Vautrhan. *he eon of ft fiibe
ho hifiast his life in his o*l liu
der the aw of friends niown up
-* JE.
* r they traveled
One day, after
I, e handsome
. i, with kindly
for allhe met, walked from the
elation to Hi*. V*04han't oaHage, and
there pat his arms abont the slight
figure of the little woman and held her
to hie turf, while she sobbed oat alond
in the strength and weakness of her
jof over ha* eon returned.
1 had left Germany Owen
this appointment of eeoond
master at the grammar sehool in Vioes
ter.one Of the first, if not the very first,
in England. Proudly Owen told his
mother and sister this, as he piotnred
glowingly the easeful, restful life they
ahwld lead with him. Then fell the
cloud, darkening at onoe his loving an
[tioipations. The mother would not
J leave her oottagft on the beaoh.
1 "I'm tot> old a tree to bear such mov
Owen, dear lad," she said. " It
Would kill s?e to be set in a new home
kowL X'd rather tarry where vour father
otter place would ever be
) Owen.l^ned at first s busy but almost
addened life at Vioester, too deeply
itnftotfa to make many friends ; but at
past ha found in Dr. Hope's household
la sweeter companionship than he had
everdxspmed of.
?1. Hope, always cordial, was doubly
aa to Owen, on whose young strength
aftd power he had learned to lean in
many ways. Mrs. Hope, doubting noth
ing <*t the young man's antecedents,
because he had been reoommended by
these Who stood high on the world's
ladder, encouraged his visits and made
pleeaant to him, with that subtle,
tact which some ladies possess
eminently ; and Alice, their only
greeted him always with her
?smile, flushing brightly when
ard his step upon the pavement
comrt, na jipe daily watohed for
?lina.
) saw his eyes glad$
H no one saw his
?U mat hers ; for <
- :the oottasre on
ffinadf
of his early poverty ; so
?kerirom her own frankly
la and pleasure in her old
__ name.
It was Ohristmas Eve, and Owen was
to <fine at the sohool-house. He enter
ed the long, warm room just aa Alioe,
with her hands full of flowers, came in
from the greenhouse. While they
lingered together srranging the flowers,
she wooed him on to talk of what she
felt he loved, and knowing that home
would be near his heart this Ohristmas
time, asked him of his mother and
' Bister.
The oolor mounted slowly to Owen's
brow at the mention of the names of
those he loved, and at the same moment
the words of one of the doctor's guests
struok upon his quiok, keen esr:
" Mnoh as I want a tutor in my
sebool. I could not engage Leelie, bo
oanso he cannot have been brought up
? gentleman. His father, I hear, was a
Tillage tradesman. But what looks
partioulsrly bad is that he does not tell
me the fact himself. In many ways he
would undoubtedly suit the post. He
is gentlemanly-looking, speaks well,
besides haying testimonials of the high
est das*. Still, there is thst insuper
able objection."
" Insuperable," muttered the doctor,
assenting. " I would not entertain the
idea. What do you think, Vaughan ?"
" If," said Owen, taking a long time
to peel an atom of walnut, and looking
down upon it rery intently, "if his
words and sets, ss well as his appear
ance, aro those of a gentleman, I cannot
see what difference is left for his birth
to Atake. One can but look and act and
speak as a gentleman, let one's birth be
the nobles tin the land ; and if we miss
none of these things in each other,what
need have we to question farther?"
u Ton apeak warmly, Vaughan. In
0?y piece vou evidently would engage
this son of a village shopkeeper to help
to eduoate noblemen and gentlemen's
soni." Z
ruondo not of tan queetion ?aoh
on our birth and early Hie," naid
Ow?, " and 0o not often volunteer to
talk of it unquestioned. Then will it
nerer be that we may judge men by
what we And then?re?p?ot or deepiea
them?not according to the rank thej
bear, hat according to the part they
aet r' f i - -i ''
" Better in theory than in practice,
Vaujrhan." said Dr. Hope. litbtlT
?'Stfil, my objeotion i? tEe want) of
trnthfeteeee at ?Uriing."
" Many ot our higheet familiee," said
AUoe. hare been fowded by one man
who naa risen from the people, and
they are proud to traee beck toMMh aa
beoauae we are hie ooft
should we eooiAjrimfor
5'j** ? JKjT." 'i .(fl
Mid Owen, ,
1'e faoe, while
Mthiiif
if *
giving him a welcome always in your
bouse, and bad then discovered his
history?should you blame him for his
silenoe ?" \ <""
'* Blame him !" echoed the doctor,
hotly. "I should turn my back upon
him promptly, I assure you, were he the
finest scholar in England."
Slowly and darkly the oolor rose in
Owen's face. " Tnat is the general
opinion, I suppose," he said ; and Alioe
was not the only one who notioed the
tone of pain in his voice.
- "What should vou do yourself, Mr.
Vaughan ?"- asked Mrs. Hope, merrily.
" Come, next to the doctor himself, you
are the one most likely to be plaoea in
suoh a position." ?
" I think," said Owen, quietly, "that
I should merely care what the man
himself might be. It would signify as
little to me what his father had been as
what his son would be years and years
afterward."
" Wait until some one imposes upon
you," returned the doctor ; "* he would
not like it, would he, Alioe ?" he added,
laughing up at her as she rose to follow
her mother.
Eagerly Owen waited for her anwser.
"I do not think a really low-born
man oould succeed in such an impos
ture, papa," she carelessly said, "even
if he tried."
The mirth had all died out of Owen's
eyes when he joined Alioe again, and
her shy, kind words oould not bring it
book ; neither did their memory bring
a tender smile to his lips when he re
called them afterward.
He performed his old tasks just as he
had performed them always.
As the spring oame on Alice drooped
and pined so sadly that they said she
needed the sea air, and they begged
her to acoept the invitation of an old
school friend who had lately married
and gone from her home in Scotland to
stay with , her husband's relations on
the Welsh coast.
" It is to Llanvriar I am going, Mr.
Vaughan," said Alioe, a little wearily,
as she told Owen of her approaching
departure, while he stood steadily be
fore her looking into hear pale face.
" Papa sajrs he thinks I shall be close
?r home. Msy I take anything
* them anything I can do r*
*r ha told bar,
w * - - *?"
le
4&ee was at Llanvriar there
was a ooncert given by the patrons of
the Ferfybsnk school. One of the
singers, a pretty, grave-looking girl
of about twenty, struck Alioe particu
larly.
" It almost seems to me as if I had
seen her before," she said to Mrs.
Gwynne, her host; " and yet I know I
have not I have not even seen any
one very like her ; and yet somettfpg
in her eyes, I think, seems famililt to
me. Who is she ? "
"She is supposed to be rather a pe
culiar girl," was the answer ; " yet no
one knows why, unless to be good and
helpful to one's mother is peouliar.
Perhaps they think so in Ferrybank,
for it isn't a very common failing there.
She has a brother, though, who is pe
ouliar really ; a specimen of that rare
wild-plant genius, a specimen no one
would expect to find drifted into a
wretched fisher cabin on our shore. He
was one of my unole's proteges. I
wish Sir Bnlkley were at home now so
that you might ask about him. My
uncle is so proud to rehearse his career.
T believe he is doing excellent now in
England, and I suppose he deserves it,
for he studied like any old don yon like
to mention, Miss Hope."
" Did he ?" asked Alioe, but little in
terested. " Please to tell me what is
this girl's name ?"
" Duddgha Vanghan. Hei mother
is a washerwoman, and lives in
one of those desolate oabins on the
shore, in the very midst of the fish
odors: a lasting disgrace, I think?
though I dare not say so to Sir Bulkley
?to the son, who lives in abundance
himself, and leaves his mother and sia
ter to earn their own livelihood in-suoh
a hole. You can see the cottage from
our windows. I will show it to you ;
snob a poor plaoe it is."
" What ?"
The word oame from Alioe in a whis
per, and seeing she was anxious to hear,
Mr. Owjnne told her his version of
Owen's story ; while the words orept in
to her ioy heart, and the mnsio to
whioh she had oome to listen died no
heard.
That Owen should have been her
truest friend for all two years?her
nearest and first friend, she repeated
to herself, the flush of anger and mor-|
tifloation rushing into her face at the
thought?only to give her this pain at
last I
" I think I will go OTer just onoe and
see his mother," she said to herself
over and orer again during her stay at
LlanvrUor; but a strange new feeling of
shame, whioh she blushed to reoogmae,
prevented her.
Alioe had be*u back at home a weak
or mors when Owen Vaughan earns
voluntarily onoe more to the oohool
hove*. Dr. and Mrs. Hops -were both
out, and Alio? eat alone. The familiar
step, for whieh she had so often listen
ed, was oloee behind her now, yet she
never tamed. How eouid she tarn
.whil* that light?half of sagsr, but
half of pansionato affect,ion hnrned in
bet eyes? He set beside her, grave and
gentle as of old, but there wee a new
M?e in his voioe when he told her the
her; bat theee words Am mm were ?t
tered from his heart, and their truth
and earnestness were like the truth Mid
earnestness of prayer.
" I here determined many time* that
I would never utter theee word* to
you, Alioe," he said. " I here itnig
Sled long end hard against tempta?lc~,
ut it has mastered me at last. Before
you went away, looking so frail, I al
moat broke my resolution. But when
you oame back, still looking weak and
ill, and when I found you oold and
strange to me, I said, ' I will listen to
nothing now but my own heart. I will
tell her the story ox my early life, and j
then how fervently I hare loved her:
and must love her always. I will tell
her both these things, and leave my
fate in her hands." Alioe, I reed my
answer in your face. You disdain this
love of mine. Tou send me from you,
and it will be hard to trust or hope inj
any one again. Wait; do not say it
1 vet. I thought I had prepared myself,
but the darkness falls so suddenly."
But Alioe did say it. She tula him
ahe disdained the love he offered; and
told him so in oold and scornful words
whioh were to oome back to her after*
ward with the orushing weight with
whioh they fell upon his heart. And
he watched the voung, fresh lips from
whioh the cruel words were falling, as
if he were struggling to awake from
some desolate dream.
"Tou tell me this story of your child
hood, Mr. Vaughan," she ended, with
ohilling slowness, "because you
guess that I heard it before I re
It is as unnecessary to tell it to
me at all now, aa it is unnecessary to
tell me of the imagined love that W*a
built up on deoeit.
The shadows, darkening his eves as
he turned them slowly from hers, fright
ened her, and sh e dared not gianoe at
him as he sat in that de^tftly silenpe>
his ohest heaving with violent emotion.
" If you Were capable of suoh love es
you speak of," she wentonwith
emphasis in his long silence,
your own mother ana sister be
in poverty while yon are living
us as a gentleman f"
" Hush t" he said slowly, as he roee^
with a suppressed passion in his steefr
fsst eyes. " Tou have aaid enough
kill my hope ; more than you will os
to reeall in th$ years to oome. ~
rare sweet moments Save I ev
ed that you would aoeept m;
for me that you oan
them."
The spring sunshine still streamed
through the old window, but it touched
the white brave faoe no longer. The
slow step died below upon the pave
ment, and as eaoh echo fell heavily on
Alioe's heart she longed to ory aloud.
" If I had been prepared, she sigh
ed wearily, "or if I had really been
what he has thought me, I should have
?have said it differently."
"I think, mother." she whispered
that evening, when her mother won
dered at her wan faoe, *' it would do me
good to go back to Llanvriar for a little
time. I promised to do so if I could.
Will you let me go at onoe ?"
So the next morning Alioe went.
A little of the old oolor had oome
baok to Alioe's oheek, and a little of the
old lightness to her step, before she had
been many days at Llanvriar. But she
knew it was not the sea air only whioh
had brought them back. Sir Bulkley
ftwynne was at home now, and on the
i very first evening of her arrival she had
heard Owen's story from him. Think
ing over it, Alioe felt a great ohange
had oome overall her thoughts of Owen.
" It strikes me, Miss Hope," remark
J ed Mr. Gwynne, ooming up to her at
this window one day, "tnat you are
not to leave Llanvriar without seeing a
storm at sea. You say you hav.e never
seen one in your life.
" Never," answered Alioe, shudder
ing unconsciously.
" Well, I think my unole's prognostic
I of this evening is likely to be verified ;
he always dreads this south-west wind.
I I am going across to Ferrybank to see
how things are looking, for the gale in
creases fast, and threatens to be vio
lent."
Down upon the shore at Ferrybank a
breathless, eager crowd had gathered
leaning hard against the wind, anc
blinded by the spray whioh dashed in
showers to the wild shore. Oasing out
into the darkness whioh hid the huncrr
?ea, thev waited while the wide doom
of the life-boat house were' unlocked
and the great boat wheeled down to
brave the storm. Amid all the mightier
sound* Sir Bnlkley Gwynnee's voioe
rose dear and sharp, a* watching the
trained crew take down their life belts,
he counted them rapidly.
"One is miiming -Hughe* I Where
is Hughes ?'*
No one had Hera Hughes, but half a
hundred roioee oalled hit name now.
" Hii place moat be supplied," the
flouire shontod, sharply and distinctly.'
?? We dare not delat one second."
A young man, who had been prompt
in his help, came into th? light of
the lamp which Sir Bulkley hell " X
am ready. Sir Bnlkley; let me go. Ton
know that an oar is no new. toy to me.
If yon refose me 1 shall take eat my
father'* boat, Ldeten I Oould I *tay
upon the shore here while the drowning
plead for help ? In the rocket's light
7saw the life-boat frem the brig p?t
out, and X know it oould not pdll
through such a sea as this. Let me go,
Mr, Bnlkley."
As he spoka, the Baronet, raising the
lamp which he*Was placing in thebotf,
saw in '4s faoe the steady bnW
whlen t-m ft plain in Us tow 40M
i this af^I have
yo?-think
' Ave
?? and softly,
QUMt of their
upon them
, u if their
her,, Alice
from which
je home,
the morning when
" te tell of the
|eal night.
I to tell yon
-- - V* he said,
and sadness of
wea a painful
. Vaughan, of
I so much, Miss
at his mother's
yesterday or the
ohmteered to take
i boat, begged for it,
he handled his
i2 and waa untir
for the reeoued.
and ready, they said ;
you would un
r^Whether it
teo hard, or
in sometMHL
6 Med to land
I helped to
his mother's
soon forgert her
doctors talk of
and they aay he
Whe
khad
, ?iand fro
Alice listened to the Toioes
heraa she was pulled aorosa,
for all were taking of the storm, and
all spoke Owen's name.
When she readied the opposite shore,
she walked on rapidly among the spars
of the lost Tesecu and orer the dismal
line of drifted seaweed, to that cottage
on the beach, in which stae knew that
Owen lay. For a moment she felt she
mast be mistaken, because no crowd
had gathered here, bat one glance
around showed her a group of people
whispering together at a short distance,
and unoonscioualy thanking them in
her heart for the silent respect thus
shown, she knocked softly at the half
closed door.
" I am an old friend of Mr. Vaugh
an's," said Alioe, very softly, as she
I looked appealingly into. the face of
Owen's sister, ?? May I see him ?"
" My brother is very, very ill," she
whispered, every word uttered in keen
est pain. 11 Do you think you had
better see him ?"
"Yes, O yes, if I may," replied Alioe,
her roioe most earnest and entreating.
| The end was very, very near. Alioe
saw that, even in her first yearning
gaaa. ,
" Owen I" she cried. But she oould
say no other word, and only fell upon
her knees heside the bed, and looked
at him with all her heart surging in her
eyes.
'|Alioe, onoe more together," he
whispered ; and the look npon hit face
was one of perfect peaoe, no agony, and
no regret. '?Together at the end. The
distanoe that lay between us, dear, is
all traveled now."
Kneeling there in the presenoe of the
reek Leveller, and looking back upon
er^Ufe and his, Alioe felt how Blight
44 been this distance of Which he
ipoke. yet how imno^rihle in it
new. The barrier which had atood be
tween them when she felt herself above
him had been raised by her own hand,
she owned, with a sobbing pain at her
heart Now, with that wonaerfnl glory
on hie faoe, he stood immeasurably
abort* her ; and this barrier was from
the hand of God.
And still she oould not speak to him
one word; only her eyes, so foil of
love and pain and penitenoe told all.
His two kind friends were with him
at the end. Old Dr. Hope, who had
<mly the day before reoeived the short
Mad letter in whieh Owen told his
story and resigned his appointment in
the grammar school, was in time to toll
him, with dim syes, how he had eome
hlinelf on purpose to t*mpt him beok
to the pise* he had filled so well; and
Bir Bulkier Chrynne was ftlMte too.
walking quietly in the outer room, and
muttering that tho sunshine on the
The mfm upon th? pillow, bright with
unutterable happiness, read the yearn
ing lore upon those faces gathered in
silent room, and feed it in that
liKht whirh made all ole.r
r, through the open doorway,
soothing mnrmar of th* eee^
bsbbi
the unreached heaven. The only
shadow as the bright spring noon vu
the hashed shadow of the outapread
wings. ?
CallftraU Sea Lions.
The sea lions, which congregate by
thousands upon the elifii of the Oah
fornia ooast, end bsrk and howl sad
shriek end roar in the oavss sad upon
the sleep sunny slopes are but little
disturbed,and one can ususlly spproaeh
them within twenty or thirty yards. It
is an extraordinarily interesting sight to
see theee marine saensters, many of
them bigger than an ox, st play in the
surf, and to wateh the supurb skill with
which they know how to control their
own motions when * hugh ware seizee
them, and seems likely to dash them to
pieces against the roeu. They love.to
lie in the sun upon the bare and warm
rocks; and here they sleep, crowded
together, and laying upon each other
in inextricable oonfusion- The bigger
the animal, the greater his ambition ap
pears to be to climb to the highest sum
mit ; and when a huge, slimy beest has
with infinite squirming attained a soli
tary peak, he does not tire of raising his
shasp-pointod, maggot-like head, and
oomplaoently locking about him. They|
are a rough set of brutee?rank bullies,
I should say; for I have watched them
repeatedly, as a big fellow shouldered
his wax among his fellows, reared his
huge front to intimidate some leeser
seal which had scoured a favorite spot,
and first with howls, and if this did not
suffice, with teeth and main force
pelled the weaker from his lodgment.
The smaller'sea lions, st least those
which hare left their mothers, appear
to have no rights whioh any one' is
bound-to respect They get out of the
way with an ftbject promptness whioh
proves that they live In terror of the
stronger members of the community ;
but they do not give up their plaoes
without harsh oomplainte and piteous
irnw
Plastered sgainst the rooks, and with
their ttthe and apparently boneless
conformed to the rude and sharp
they are a wonderful, but not a
sight. *At a Utile
huge maggeta,
s upon
blanoe.
at a distance
head,
the rocks
then it is a
dosen or half aliundred great Ma Hooi
at play in the very midst and fiercest
part of the boiling surge, so oompletety
masters of the situation that they allow
themselves to be oarried within a foot
or two of the rooks, and at the last snd
imminent moment, with an adroit twist
of their bodies, avoid the shook, and
diving, re-appear beyond the breaker.
A l^oftj City.
Potosi, in Bolivia, 8. A., is the high
est city in the world, being at an ele
vation of 13",350 feet, considerably above
the level of the summits of many of the*
Alpine mountain giants, and only 360
feet below the topmost peak of the ioy
Jangfran itself. This is a tolerably
lofty altitude for a eity ; but then Potosi
is the metropolis of the riohest silver
mines in the world, which are worked
in the neighboring Oerra (Sierra, or
high ridge) ae Potosi, at an altitude of
16,000 feet above the sea level, r. great
er height than the top of Mount Blanc ;
so that the abundance of the preoioun
metals, we may suppose, compensates
the 30,000 inhabitants (about half of
whom are of the native raoes) for th*
rarity of the air, the rapid alterations
of olimate, which presents the charac
teristics of the four seasons every twen
ty-four hours, and the jrugged ban en -
ness of the surrounding districts.
Fierce Wind,
The nignal station on the top of
Mount Washington reported a north
west gale blowing at the rate of 140
miles an hour?as shown by the anemo
meter?and a temperature of 18 degrees
below zero. This is probably the high
est force ever attained by the wind in
New England. A gale 60 or 70 miles
an hour will often blew down trees. In
the hurrioanes of the tropics a foroe of
100, even J10 miles an hour is not un
common. No human being oould stand
before sueh a gale. The people in the
ohained-down hut contrive to examine
the anemometer without emerging? else
they would be swept off bodily aiyl
hurled down Taekerman's Ravine. The
roar of suoh a mountain gale is terrible
beyond words.
A Mrnin,?According to the Cin
cinnati f/osette, Mr. S. A. Boll of Plain
fleld, Ohio, baa found under an aneient,
mon quantity of fragments of bones ,
of yo ... ? children, with th* tooth, of a
rodent anUul whieh had been need as
a neok omasaeat. These relic* were
. fonnd iif a large bed of coal and aahei,
rtndioatin* that the lira had covered a
spaoe of twenty-Ave feel in diameleff.
It is supposed thai the children sren
the victims of some bloody ??nrlflglal
rite. The mound under whieh the flilies
were buried wss of medium else, and
ite materials had been transported from
mitrom
jumnw pesina.
I tews of Interest,
The actual expense of cremation is
about fa.
The best security?purse -onal re
sponsibility.
The hard times out West have made
many people lose ground.
It doesn't follow that Rome was built
in a night because it was not built in a
day.
The only State of the Union ruled
orer by a special Providence?Rhode
The St. Louis Journal says that one
ef its exohanges has an intermittent
mailing clerk.
To cure a batchelor's aches?carry
to the paitent, eleven yards of silk,with
a woman in it.
A man who travels barefoot around
his bed-room, often finds himself on
the wrong tack"
It it wasn't for the Acheenese and
the Temperanoe war the entire world
would now be at peace.
To what well-known-New "5terk firm do
the youthful boot-polishers in the park
belong ??Bawl k Black.
. It is said that when Jonah saw the
whale getting ready to swallow him, he
looked " down in the month.";
An Irish lover remarked that is a
great pleasure to be alone, especially
when your " swateheart is wid ye."
It is a bad sign when a fair girl asks
you to hold a skein of wool?she evi
dently wishes to slip through your fln
Anything Midas touched was turned
to gold. In these dsys, touch a man
with gold, and he'll turn into any
thing.
Out of the total population of 3ft,- *
000,000, the French oensus shows a to
tal of 13,000,000 who oan neither read
nor write. '
A Wisconsin paper says of Sumner:
" He was a great statesman, and if he
borrowed a dollar he didn't forget to
retain it."
We have heard of but one old woman
who kissed her oow, but there are
theusands of young ones who have kiss
ed great calves. . * Tv
they can't crusade at Dubuque. An $
ordinanoe of that oity provides that
tliare shall be no singing ox loud talk
ing in" '
: on aooount of nice
That sNs a sansible old chap in 1
In a recent trial in Baltimore it was
shown that patent medicine men get
almanac oertifloates of the wonderful
virtues of their medicines for fifty
cents per head.
Dlinois has extended to married wo
men every right but fchat of suffrage.
Thej can keep their own earnings, and
transact business with their husbands
as With strangers.
The Wisconsin newspapers report that
birds-eve and curly maple logs are
shipped from Green Bay to New York,
to be manufactured: into veneerings for
walls, to take the plaoe of paper hang
ings.
Miss Cousins tells s St. Louis Timt*
reporter that the way to put down the
saloons is for all young ladies to resolve
never to reoeive attentions f'om any
young man whose breath is tainted
with alooholio perfumes.
A man who beheld an accident at
Virginia,Nev., whereby another person
lost his leg, was so shocked lhat his
black hair turned gray on the spot, and
he grew so faint as to remain for some
time in a helpless condition.
Temperance has been triumphant in
Lookport, New York, formerly a profit
able locality for rum sellers. The peo
ple have not only stopped drinking, bnt
voted that there shall be no more licen
ses. The New York Editorial Associa
tion sheets at Lookport this season.
A lady in Lake City, Florida, has
grown in her garden a genuine cork,
tree thirty feet high, the bark on whioh
is sufficiently thiok to make bottle
corks. There is also in the same gar- "
den a genuine black pepper hash,
whioh yields regularly a full crop of .
the berries.
Texes is rapidly reoovering credit
? since the overthrow of the carpet bag
Administration. * Qov. Cook advises
every person who holds a just claim for
money against Texas that it is worth ?
every dollar it calls 4or, and if he will
only hold it one hundred days he will' <
scot his money. ? ?*. .?
The North Adams transcript tells of *
a young lady there Who was troubled
with a sore tongue and* consulted a
physician, who at onoe pronounced it a
case of sunburn. The voluble lady was
ohagrined, and there were evident and
immediate symptoms tfenriPthe tongue
waa growing worse.
?unshinl of the season
o# an zbdianapolis
a love letter thus :
the dish it square,
the next State fair. 4
/fog, the dram ahall
y, and we'll fo dancing all the wtf.
pUy, aa
Answer
\S.