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Show KOI I TUT I.AI)II. I v . : : . . k : i. : .-;.. -a. : I - v. .' - : ..l-.c .-.i.ia t.' Ka:.i.L.-.- i ' x : . --. - r "A- i if' v i t -.; k: ni-.l. th uj ' .-:r ; l':a V. "1 J e t LJ.r." -v. a S.r.-.-:-.T. "Li: w:...a O.i u-j Aljiu. . '.:.: !..':.: : slI a .:..a:i t' t -i Lluj '.!.'. A:. 1 t:.- L: -t t'..:.j i.-'.i L;:n vi... I j c. tLL i:i:-.r:.l Sj:-J a .ji;-.'-- Lu-lat-J. wc.se v'ki L..1 .-toI-.-n up U!.u.i i.im aad 1 .iveo L:iu a k:-i : "Madiiu, 1 vu-r -AjT ?uch an a:c itil-.-c jr'ju ! ' 'Ks-cus 'Ks-cus u:e." .-ill the w::V. ''1 JUu't iiuow it wi- you !" TL-.y d j a rc'.ty J.t.;-- divorce La.-i-n--s in a (jiict way iu Mx-sathutts. The Worecrtcr (i''i;':.'F mentions that there are UoW Ho su.i tor the d:-'.'lu-tioii of the nrirrinee Coiitraet 'end;!!.-'' m the uiTome court there. C hiciteo t-raeoi'Lihy abdicates the chain ;ion-h; iu lavor of the little Hay tate viiiaee. The Paris Journal reports the following fol-lowing conversation totwei-ti twoyouns girls : "If you only knew how baJiy papa treats mainma and me ! ' "'Indeed!" "'In-deed!" "Ves, indeed! You can judjre for yourself: hen I was ready to be 'brought out' in society, he might have gone with me, might he: not? Well, instead of that, when mamma and I went to his room to find him we discovered he had been j absent from the house a whole year." I A pious lady, descanting at the j breakiast table the other morning, on the holy state of matrimony, repeated the old saying that "Matches were made in heaven," when her little son, a bright boy of six, said, "Yes, dear mamma, that's where parlor matches are made ; but how about the other kinds ?" Mrs. Woodhull, in tho last issue of her raper, says : "Such minds as would discontinue the reading of a pa per because its editors chance to hold that prostitution is a trade by which women live, only show their own littleness. little-ness. Rest assured that we feel complimented com-plimented by the knowing that the free speech we utter finds some tender people peo-ple whose mental stomachs cannot endure en-dure strong food, or a variety to which they have not been accustomed." And : she wants the Presidency. A Galveston young man has lost faith in human nature worse than Grant did. He courted a girl over two weeks, and her parents said they wouldn't permit any such thing, so the young people concluded to elope, lie got a young man, a friend of his, to take the girl to New Orleans, where he would meet them and marry the girl, and go somewhere and enjoy life sensible. The young proxy took the girl all right, hut before the fellow that did the courting arrived, he had married mar-ried her and gone to keeping house. The deceived chap says you won't catch him courting up another girl for some one else, not if he knows it. |