OCR Text |
Show t . !! PARADISE FOR HONEYMO ONERS. ' ! ' Jj 1 If the dispatch recently sent out fjroin Seattle is authentic a H number of young married couples of that city hit upon a novel, Jm I plan to get away from prying eyes of everybody and spend a' M quiet honeymoon. The scheme was accomplished last Wednesday, when a steamer left Seattle for San Francisco and Los Angeles ' with a passenger list made up entirely of bridal couples. Commenting on this honeymoon ship, the Butte Miner says!, That certainly ought to be a happy journey for all concerned. No one to care how much spooning goes on. No one to complain that every available cozy nook is being unduly occupied, for the couples, realizing that they are all brides and grooms, will not find it so expedient to hide away from what under ordinary conditions would be discomforting and prying eyes. There will bo no grumpy old party on board to declare that the sight of so much lovomaking induces in him a feeling not attributable attri-butable entirely to the action of the waves. There will bo no spinster there to declare she "never saw such goin's on." The captain, doubtless, will take scant notico of his passengers, while the crew will be too busy to stand around and stare. As for the passengers, they won't know whether tho sea is smooth or rough; whether the ship is making fast time or not; whether land is in sight or a thousand miles away; whether what's the use? All the world may love, and as for newly married couples, it wouldn't harm or disturb them for anything. ! |