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Show THE HEBER HERALD. V touching how he pleaded Newt's limit- house) with my sister who is giving me ed understanding in extenuation of his a quarter an hour to watch for pop. behavior, and expressed his thanks that it hadnotbeen made known in the school. : i Mr. Bigger could never quite understand how the changes so salutary could have been wrought, except by constant use of the hickory or the peach tree. Waking up of mornings finding that not a wheel nor a gate had been desturbed he, 'looked sometimes as if he were disappointed, and inwardly indulging gloomy prophesyings. You see everything was so entirely against precedents. For. a time his manner toward Overby was somewhat reserved; but when he found that the young man showed no disposition to taunt or boast, and when his young time-honore- d 'I I j M I1 i l! J T . " at the Herald Done very cheap Office. . . . SSss , Dominions had grown upland taken he seem their proud place in barn-yared to feel that, as an honerable man," he ought to strive to be' reconciled. The end. d, A PEIP SELF-POSSESSE- D . . , ELER. z m If you donYgo out of here in a! minute 111 scald you! exclaimed the wrathful woman of the house to the per- sistant peddler. That water-onth- e be hot for a half hour yet; stove wont ' So you had. answered the merchant. better let me sell" you 'one of' these" that automatic patent beat water in less than two .minutes Over a slow fire. If you had one of them, I should have been scalded, and on my way to sell something to the red haired woman who is attemptingto keep house next door. f' . , EARNING HIS AlONEY. t & Benevolent Gentleman My little bby, have you no better way to speifcf this beautiful Sabbath afternoon than by standing in front of the gate idling away your timc? Boy I aint idling away rpy time; Theres a yotmg fellow inside there' (pointing witl) his jlnger towards the 4 S tea-kettl- e lake the Herald and be happy. . |