THE RAMBLER 
Reporters at times have to write 
up marriages and on occasions they 
rise to flowery heights, but the fol- 
lowing account taken from the 
Charlotteville (Ky.) Chronicle has ’em 
all beaten a mile: 
“The bride is a woman of won- 
drous fascination and remarkable at- 
tractiveness, for with manner as en- 
chanting as the wand of a siren and 
a disposition as sweet as the odor of 
flowers and spirits as joyous as the 
carolings of birds and mind as bril- 
liant as those glittering tresses that 
adorn the brow of winter and with 
heart as pure as dewdrops trembling 
in a coronet of violets she will make 
the home of her husband a paradise 
of enchantment like the lovely home 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
of her girlhood where the heaven- 
toned hero of marriage with its 
chords of love and devotion and fond 
endearment sent forth the sweetest 
strains of felicity that ever thrilled 
the senses with the rythmic pulsing 
the ecstatic rapture.” After reading 
the above, the Rambler wondered 
if that reporter had been partaking 
of the beverage known as Kentucky 
moonshine. 
Oo % 
Arthur W. Clark of Hamilton and 
Wenham tells me that the fish are 
biting good at Lake Winnipesaukee 
this year. To prove it, he showed 
me a four-and-a-half-pound lake 
trout that he caught there Wed- 
nesday and he expects to get more 
in the near future. Mr. Clark is the 
pleasant-faced conductor who leaves 
on the Wolfboro train from the North 
station at 3.30 afternoons. He stays 
overnight to make the early run back 
to Boston and is up mornings at 4 0’- 
clock seeking finny prey.—Observant 
Citizen in Boston Post. 
o32 O° 
Scores of residents of this section 
must have been in Salem last Saturday 
for they came home tagged with a 
carnation in their buttonholes. Many 
thousands of pinks were sold in Salem 
Saturday, the occasion being the an- 
nual benefit day in aid of the tuber- 
culosis camp at Salem Willows. Win- 
27 
ning smiles from nearly two hundred 
young ladies located all around the 
city gave the incéntive for the buying 
of the pinks and that the girls were 
successful will be testified to when 
it is found that hundreds of dollars 
were cleared during the day. 
O: 80-0 er 
Mayor Hurley of Salem is evidenly 
getting “in Dutch” with his constitu- 
ents of the Witch City on account of 
his recent experiences with the moving 
picture men who have been using the 
old city as a studio for the past two 
weeks. Already a sentiment has been 
current for the recall of John F., but 
he denies that personal vanity promp- 
ted him to make the “movies” men the 
guests of the city. He says a request 
from the Salem Board of Trade set- 
ting forth the advantages of the ad- 
vertising received from the appearance 
of the films throughout the country 
was his motive for giving the photo 
men the special privilege they enjoyed. 
It seems rather like questionable ad- 
vertising and not a bit like the sup- 
posedly. staid, Puritanical, old Salem. 
AMBITIOUS 
“Why don’t you make Johnny wash 
his hands once in a while?” 
“They are taking finger prints at his 
school,” answered the wife, “and you 
know how the child loves to excel.”— 
Kansas City Journal. 
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