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Show 1 I I,' :,. n it" II I , . ; il..-h'AV.-t i:-p'i:-i: jo It -r.::v h-.r cr: Mr-. W"j : i ..I L'- C I .'T a i:f!.w. Ti.-' r.-'Lt i."..t! "f ;'i:-v u-ia r:--.i;r 11.13 tiaLi A Ca' -li'an h :.! n- ! 1 a -:.-a ir '.':.e r-.'i i.t. --r tu. Th :-: "'.r r: '.'ir.'u t j 1 .-.i-; tae ;. .-'.-r- iav s 1 '-I, -:-r. ' Ta!: m. j: c-.ti--c:t is iijUo'i aj yu .'ii, k Vj L-jman i;i:aracTfr im a.r Li t'j li-tf (.o.-an. it kecj-.? it -c.f. ul! r'.-C'iir it euu araol'.. r a w.:. i:r : a:. i l ..-:. i:. ifl F.-j'.:.-..o I';?, thjujh ':.-. 1.. d.-c 1.:! a-. 1 i:.:'.-:.-r. Tie Uicst B::i:-h txa.c i.-r who La? . l.ted Atiicriua anu nn'.tcn ajut a ay?: i Lave never seen si wiuy ui.e i.jckirjg o;d lati.es aj in ljj.t ..n. A raul o.'DveLtiva c-f a'l tl. L-a-- v.. i, i-i the Mi'e L- ti le L.M a-llu:laci, a-llu:laci, Xt , sjLlc ti'ii- d lr'.i.x tL.-urL'-vr. '1 Le r.-? a.l ftau: tu leave tvwa aj2t that t: a.c. A Verdet.t Cj Ce'dcr, Uf-e'U -einj a l.i-.Miuu:ive tor the tint tiiue, tnr.- . up his Laud-, exe.aiujiui: "Ly thua-d-r! what a darned great stove. A Coui:ec:icut farther ji'.owe 1 up a ' !ad 's g'.ld wateh, the o:h r d.iy, and' can't bud the owner, lie ii;ereiy wanta to know how lijug it has teen j--.aute.l. , They say now that the Emperor o: (Jcruiauy is a f-ractieal priuter. An his laiuiiy aie uh.iarcd to have some trade. ihiaui chose to Le a t po, and worked at the easo three yc.ir. Llonn l'Lut ha; wiitteu a good story about an Koglish snoh, and ti.e (.oiut ; of the story lies in the expre-sion, "Aw, I beg jjawdon." The iutel.igent ; .compositors are extrae'iug the point ly j 1 'correcting" it and making it leal ' i beg pardon." j Somebody lias said very likely it : was taid in the Table Talk utThe Luuis I ' ville Coimnerciul that when a man is on the throne women govern, and that when a woman is there men sovern. So if Mrs. Victoria C. .Yoodhull ever ' get3 to be President we may look for a : reign of blood. i One of the amateur newspapers i prides itself on the fact that although' j u ii an amateur newspaper it is not an I "amatory paper." ews matter is not j necessarily "amatory." It is the conspicuous con-spicuous absence of all news matter that I makes the amateur newspaper conspicuous. con-spicuous. ' Some people make their religion go a long way. A good woman bought a 'lottery ticket here, the other day, accompanying ac-companying the purchase with the soliloquy: "The Lord knows how it'll turn out. It's all in the hands of the ; Almighty, I s'pose. The old devil's at ! the bottom of it all." ; There is no astonishment expressed !at Washington that the mail service ;does Dot pay expenses. At the Capitol one day last week more than one hundred bugs of free matter, weighing seventy-five or one hundred pounds each, were awaiting a carman to take them to the Post Office. They contained con-tained printed matter for Scnator.and ! were to be -ent to their homes. Three i Senators had more than twenty each; ;one had six. There were thirteen also : for a Senator whose term of office ex-; ex-; pired last March. |