Show WP YEAR 4 41 I 1 1 this 14 leap your and the fact that N so ilithe advantage is being taken of it 1 in all quarters argues one of two or 5 thre things the ladies may be in ig I 1 6 of privileges bit vie doubt it or perhaps are permitting theta to go by default alost likely the latter Is the situation which i cabb the bissextile Is destined hero I 1 after as it has been doing for some I 1 I 1 time to come and go the same alt any I 1 othar vor with no distinction dib I 1 axce of one of its months being little longer than at other times perhaps the fact that the leap year P Is always born tit the beginning of the s cold season and the human family have else to think al olit until tho gentle sp fh glowing su er shed their influences around us has something to do with it and per baas tot however this may be the I 1 way iblings used to be dona when the quadrennial period red has been at least partially sidetracked at the I 1 station of desuetude 1 I 1 1 I elated that under the old coin I 1 moi aw it spinster was free to I 1 herself in marriage act a bae elor in the bles sextile year Asto what hap I 1 pell id a amsa the offer was n of re e cepter cep ted hor lifes didar one states I 1 that the man may refuse but that he must in that case redeem himself by nj the baily with a silk dress I 1 the old rules all had some symbolic I 1 meaning learned commentator writing on this subject nearly three centuries ago states that if the I 1 man refuses he shall forfeit his eriv I 1 fleglar of clergy serious matter in those days when the those I 1 privileges saved manya neck yet another commentator declares that be bits disco vorea in the old saxon code from which our common law was largely derived a provision which I 1 absolutely forbade the man to refuse it not be lawful says this visa law for the man to say her nay what was don with recal citra tat males we are not informed pro babi y as in the plays the man choose between altri mony and death in scotland he got off ay paying a pound and this wai perhaps as just a law as any since the wor cans love should not be and the generality of horrid men are so averse to marrying one of the opposite sex who his reached a late period and place in life with no compensating graces that I 1 they would gladly give up a pound or evea a hundred pounds rather than vb thu connected I 1 of course all that sort of thing has I 1 the courts of to 1 not enforce such a law even it 1 by chance one on the statute books but the fact that they not Is not we take it of the backwardness on the part of 4 tho ladies of today to day it is it our 2 11 1 judgment Is worth anything because r they are better and brighter aad mo re modest chaa those of that day this I 1 makes them more desirable and so much sough t for that they dont need to do any seeking even if they had 11 the disposition to do it we respect them all admire the majority ands I 1 love a few the we in this case is not the editorial pro noun |