THE HEDLEY INFORMER Fol'

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THE HEDLEY INFORMER Fol' THE HEDLEY INFORMER fOL'. XVIII HEDLEY, DONLEY COUNTY. TEXAS. SEPTEMBER 21. 1928 N O . 45 SINGERS WILL MEET HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS IN CONVENTION HERE ORGANIZE GLEE CLUB Prompt, Cheerful School Th« aiaccra of Donley and ai- Hr dlay has a High School Girla jololna eonntiea will mtet in Olea Club Thay net Sept 11 convention on Satnrday niKbt, after school, with Mlaa late SERVICE Sept 22nd, and acain Sanday Blankenship, and orgat iat d tbe S i i p p l i e s moroin«, Sept 23rd, for an All club. There were twenty seven Day Seaainn at Firat Cbriatian girla present and more arc going Obarcb in Hedley. to join The girle are eeunting is what you get when you buy S('HOOL TIME almost hfre Everybody Invited. on doing great tblags in their BrioK l«i cb and come prepared üiee Club work this year, and here. You also get Quality again, and we want to remind to stay all day. are alta depending on YuU ta you that this is the beat place to help them aceompliab tbeac Groceries at the Right Price. W A N T E D — Laundry work, things. Ofbeeraeftba club ara buy School Supplies of all kinds. waabinc and ironioK. lalaobave as fallows two rooma I would like to rent General Director, Mica lact MAY WE SERVE YOU? We have this year the Largest and Beat Sp« Mra Deal Blankenabip. Katherine Brooka, president Stock we have ever carried Pauline PieUett, vice prealdent Varda Gilliam, aecretary. FREE BOOK COVERS MISS MYRTLE MIMS Mary Lea Cooper, treasarar. Barnes & Hastings Gladys Ellis, reporter. P H O N E 21 TE.VCHER OF PIANO Mra Brooks, pianiat. Hcdlcy Drug Co. Tbs following oommittees base Phone 150 THE REXALL STORE been named: Membership: Paaline Pickett, chairnaa; Blancba Leach and THE PARENT-TEACHERS Lois Goin. Program: Miss loea Blanken- ENTERTAIN FACULTY chip ebairgaan; Katbrine Brooks The P T. A. entertained the Pauline Pickett, Marian Hicka See Our Wonderful faculty membera with a and Lois Goin acquainted" party last Friday Social: Verda Gilliauo, ebair. New Line of N eveuiDu at tbe aehool buildinc. man; Gladys Carroll and Bobbie .About one hundred and Mfty Smith. I parenta and friends of the acbool Censormorum: Iras Jean Blank* were preaent ensbip, chairman; Edith Plank A abort program was rendered and Katharine Brooks. New Perfection Oil Stoves inclndinit luuaie by tbe Brooka The colors far this year are to familv. followed by a biithly be silver and blue, and meeting jamurinif “ stunt" divUien viven days are .Mondays and Tbnrs* Detroit Jewel Gas Ranges by the membera of tbe P T A days from 12 m to 12:40 p m. preaapt aaalsted hy tbe faruitv. I Ask as into ynnr homes, so and For long lifo. Easy running Tboae who were not praseat do you will know just wbat wo are not know the fun they missed doing and will be a booster for as Only oil twice a year Thoas posaeaslng druR store instead of a ----(?). Reznar Gas Heaters facet certainly sot them broken Boost far the girl»! It was indeed a program fall of Reporter. amilea Now on display in our store, New Style Lawson Heaters Rafreabnaenta cnnuiating of WANTKD- Snmaoneto gather ■ on display uake and punch were aerved. peasonbalvva 34 mllea north of ‘ ! Hedley. Plenty peat for every LET US EXPLAIN body. Coyte Doherty. ! r THOMPSON BROS. CO.. s t to you haw yon nan obtain a five THE HYDER HOSPITAL Moreman Hardware per cent loan on your farm and THE HOUSE WITH THE GOODS at< p paying high interest ratus. COMPLETED AT MEMPHIS HsrdWSrB ~ T h e H o u s e of S e r v ic e ^ FumitlirB Hedley NatT. Farm Loan Ass'n. Dr D C Hyder of Memphis Ü. L Johnson, 8oc .Treas. wan in Hedley tbe first of this FOR BALE —I second band week and paid the Informer office wagona, 2 second band tents and COFHNS, CASK RTS a pleasant call. 10 atnviB. heaters and cpoWera BAPTIST LADIES HONOR Dr Ryderanununaenthe open* J T. Curtía. UNDERTAKERS’ i MISS ELEANOR BROOKS log of his hospital in Mamphia, SUPPLIES in the Boren*Klnard Building, Lieenued Embaloitrand Auto ' Tuesday afternoon at tbe home Mrs C L Kinsey and aoa. 518 Main street While there Uuares at Yuar 8ei vice of M rs W I Raias the ladies of Delbert. Mra. Kiosey of Nawitn are larger hospitals in Northeast Day phone 24 Strengthening, the First Baptist Church enter* and Mra Wiiloaghby of Oluatee, Tszan, the Hyder hospital is ao* Night phone 40 tained, honoring Miss Eleanor Obla, visited relatives at Altoa Brooks who leaven shortly for snrpavsed in the matter of «oib*O klahoma City the past week píete modern «quipmentfor geu* MOREMAN HAROWARE your Credit Rimmons Univernity at Abilene eral baspital work. | for the ensuing year. Dr Ryder has been nractlclnp ' An intereating and amiaing medicine In Memphis for the program waa carried out, direct» peat nine yeara, and has won tbe ad by Mre Bridgea, after which sonfidauce of the people through* j. little Mary Ratan Bridges and A hanking relationship through out the Memphis territory little Mary Jo Hart entered bear* Hedley people might do well Bank at Home! which you are brought into con­ ing a basket full of beautiful to inform themselves coneerninf gifts which ware depouitud atthu tact with officers who have your this institution fact of Mias Brooks interest at heart is a wise pro­ Later refreshments were narv* WE ARE YOUR NEIGHBOR? HERE We have a full line of SCHOOL ed on tbe lawo. and with many at thin bank. What a difTcreDc-e that vision. Efficient service coupled ezpranaiana of good will toward SUPPLIES. makes io your feeling toward ua. and io tbe hanoree tbe gaesta departed. Adams Dry Goods A Notions with the warmth of friendly in­ our fecliog toward you! terest is the secret of our many We have another asaortment of AMARYLLIS FLOUR I« lorga ala* Silk Crtpo adraoco'd AND FEED Í Not oaly are we right closa hy, but we are satisfied customers. F'reab ear just received. Fall stylo Drcaaea jutt as closely ia sympathy with the things Adams Dry Goods A Notiono Barnae A Hastings. that help you and help this aectien. I. Î LET US WORK TOGETHER, both for . / 6o to OABDY NIPPER'S SPESIAL SALE t Candi l[ltclieo& Filling Stitioi 1 am temporarily located in tha < our mutual good aud for the good of tbia The Old PostnSca Building and am coaamuoity. First State Bank for your Gat, Oils, Candies offering my entire atock of Gants HEDLEY, TEXAS Cold Drinks Fnrniskinga Dractically At Cost. !i BCIOOL BUPPLIBB Bom* Real Bargaios. J. C Drnt|(hv, Pratiidcnl CltMord AIIim»«. Ca«hi*t Tbia sale eontinnaa nntii 1 gat I now have tha large Oard board T R. Korcnuta, Vic« Pro ■ rnc.l JcbBWD, A » t Canhicr into tbe sew bnilding. SECURITY ST.tTE BANK tor map drawing, etc. Tai taring Work as nanal Pay HEDLEY. TEXAS Cakes, Canned Ojoda, Groeerlaa at a visit. Old Poatoflaa Bldg. CHBaP PRICEI OLARKB TIB TAILOR ✓ THE HEDLEY INFORMER BANKER RIDES TO JUDGE BY DAY AND ' M AKES $10,000 IN OFFICE IN PLANE MAGICIAN BY NIGHT ONE FISH CATCH Putt Interest in Aviation Into Fisherm an Seines 20,000 B u s h » P r a c t ic e . Jurist Spends Spare Time elt of Herrins- Mystifying Friends. New York.— lilchuril K. Hoyt. Junior West SoiiMiport, Maine.— Itesidenta men.lM'r of the linn of llii.vden. Stone Eagle River, W l».— llen “'a a Judge along Mic SIicc|iscoI river are willing A t'oiiipMi.v, liivestiiiciii bankers. Is who like» to i*nst aside the »umber lo concede all dcHcrviil llsbing honors pulling his n-putiitlon ns one of the ndirs Of the iK-nib and put on Ibe I'l the limb* river In Wlicronxin. iltlll, leiiiliiig husIncNt ml\<N'utcs of com- niagleiun’» sbliiy fiawk coal, who llki*a tlicy »ay, IlHliing ruii't be so bud on incrclnl Hvliition in this country Into lo luy liable Ibe |«*riwlg to don the Mie Sbce|iNciil wlieii a mail can go out iii-tinil practice hy using h plane to liigli »Ilk hat from wlieiire rabhit.» und gel ‘.’iMklll husbcls of fl»h in on# romnnrte between his Marian (Mass.) nre pulled, who would lay down the built. sutiiiiier home and his Itroiid street gavel to take u|t tbe ventriloqulKr» SonicMiiiig HtMMit tbe feed th# oltlce. The East river provide» u ci>n- dnmniy. SlieeiiM'ot i>ii|iplleK; »ouictliliig about venlent landing place n( (hla end of Frank Carter of Eagle River, Judge ils colli, clear waters; aoinetblng the Jouniey. for the Vila« couniy rourt, eiijoys tlie alKiut the countless IIIMe tributaries Tlie plane, a I.«s*n1nc amphibian unuaual hobby. or deep coves gashing Its shore lino -1 •*alr yachl," e<](iip|ie<l with a Wright Me bai a room In the hnw-iiient of seems to aiqicAl |Mirtlculnrly to all p V t ^ "cyclone" horse power alr-ro«h*d hla home equipited a» a thriller, a‘ilh BcliiKiltiig n»li. motor, has a luxurious cubin u|vliol- Ktage, fiKitlighta and many aceesaorle« "I hiIvImhI a man to try his luck stereil In hroailclolh and sadtile leiith (lecullar to Id» art There he »ome- at .MaddiH'ks rover, oenr West SmiMl- rr. Conot'ubKl lo<'ker» bold equip­ tline» entertains friends, »oiiiellme« |Kirt, ln»t AiigUMl." expliilna l.uMier ment for lunchi*s and rani gniiiet.
Recommended publications
  • Notes on the Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties of England and The
    S*N DIEGO) atitty, ESTABLISHED IN . THE YEAK MDCCCLXXVIII Alter et Idem. PUBLICATIONS OF THE FOLK-LOKE SOCIETY. II. LONDON: PRINTED BY NICHOLS AND SONS, STREET. 25, PARLIAMENT FOLK-LORE OP THE NORTHERN COUNTIES OF ENGLAND AND THE BORDERS. A NEW EDITION WITH MANY ADDITIONAL NOTES. BY WILLIAM HENDERSON, AUTHOR OF " MY LIFE AS AN ANGLER." " Our mothers' maids in our childhood . have so frayed us with hullbeggars, spirits, witches, urchins, elves, hags, fairies, satyrs, pans, faunes, sylvans.kit-with-the-candlestick (will-o'-the-wisp), tritons (kelpies), centaurs, dwarfs, giants, imps, calcars (assy-pods), conjurors, nymphs, changelings, incubus, Rohin-Goodfellow (Brownies), the spoorey, the man in the oak, the hellwain, the firedrake (dead light), the Puckle, Tom Thumb, Hobgoblin, Tom Tumbler, Bouclus, and such other bug- bears, that we are afraid of our own shadows." REGINALD SCOTT. LONDON: PUBLISHED FOR THE FOLK-LORE SOCIETY BY W. SATCHELL, PEYTON AND CO., 12, TAVISTOCK STREET, COVENT GARDEN. W.C. 1879. TO THE MOST HONOURABLE THE MARQUESS OF LONDONDERRY, IN EEMEMBRANCE OF MUCH KINDNESS AND OF MANY PLEASANT HOURS SPENT TOGETHER, THIS VOLUME IS, BY PERMISSION, INSCRIBED WITH EVERY SENTIMENT OE RESPECT AND ESTEEM BY HIS LORDSHIP'S ATTACHED FRIEND, WILLIAM HENDERSON. VI The Council of the Folk-Lore Society, in issuing this work as one of the publications for the year 1879, desire to point out to the Members 'that it is chiefly owing to the generous proposal of Mr. Henderson they arc enabled to produce in the second year of the Society's existence a book so much appreciated by the Folk-Lore student.
    [Show full text]
  • Mystic Investigators
    Patrick Thomas 7 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 999 BRBRBRAAAGGING RITES A Hunt Adventure 131313 AAATTTTTTAAACK OF THE TROUSER SNAKE A Terrorbelle Tale 31 A STITCH IN TIME A Case of the Soul Collector 474747 SPSPSPAAAWN OF LIGHTNING From the World of Agents of the Abyss 595959 NIGHT CRIES A Story Of The Nightcriers 727272 WORKING GIRL A Tale of the Daring 959595 Sample file TESQUE, TESQUE A Story of Fugtown 999999 PPPUT YYUT OUR DEMON ON MY SHOULDER A Little Insanity Featuring Lunay 123123123 CCCARDIAARDIAARDIAC ARREST A DMA Casefile 149149149 BARBARIAN SUMMER A Chronicle of Mog & Mikki 163163163 DDDYSENCHANTED A Hell’s Detective Mystery 170170170 8 MYSTIC INVESTIGATORS Sample file Patrick Thomas 9 INTRODUCTION It was a dark and stormy night when Neal Levin walked into my office. He looked a little nervous. These publisher types usually are. Sales numbers, returns, book buyers, temperamental authors, and the price of paper tends to wear on a man. Personally, I was hoping for a dame in red, but it’s probably for the best. My wife’s tougher than Terrorbelle and the jealous type. Marie’d never believe a lady in a slinky dress was just trying to hire me for a case, particularly since I don’t have a private investigator’s license. Still, I had the hat and the coat, not to mention the office for the day. Luckily for me I saw the real owner heading out on an out of town case and drop his keys. I’d leave them on the desk when I left and maybe water the plants.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014-06 ANA REVIEW V2.Pub
    An Naidheachd Againne The Newsletter of An Comunn Gàidhealach Ameireaganach / The American Gaelic Society An Samhradh 2014, Leabhar XXX Àireamh 2 Summer 2014, Volume XXX, No. 2 Dh’fhaighnich sinn de Mhàiri Parr gun innse i dhuinn mu We asked Màiri Parr to tell us about teaching Gaelic in Nova dheidhinn a bhith a’ teagasg na Gàidhlig ann an Alba Nuaidh. Scotia, and she responded with this description of the program Fhreagair i leis an aiste seo. Rugadh i ann an Alba (Am Maol and (in the second part, next issue) of the first student trip to Buidhe anns an Eilean Dubh) agus tha i a-nis a’ teagasg aig Scotland. Another 23 plan to go next March. Màiri was born at Sgoil Mheadhanach Naomh Anndra, Antaiginis (neo Am Baile Mulbuie on the Black Isle (Scotland) and teaches now at the Mór). high school in Antigonish. Thòisich na clasaichean tro mheadhan na Gàidhlig, ceithir The classes through the medium of Gaelic, four times a week, tursan gach seachdain, anns an Dùbhlachd 2008. Cha robh ach began in December 2008 with only 37 students in Grades 6 to 8. 37 sgoilearan ann, aig ìrean 6 gu 8. Sgoilearan Beaga a’ Bhaile The Wee Gaelic Students’ Mhòir – Alba bho Alba Nuadh! Adventure – to Scotland from Pàirt 1 New Scotland! Part 1 le Màiri Parr by Màiri Parr Dh’fhàg na sgoilearan seo clasaichean Fraingis These students had left their French language pro- letheach tron bhliadhna, ’s mar sin, b’ e dleastanas gramming specifically to join the Gaelic class so I mòr a thuit orm mo dhìcheall a dhèanamh dhaibh.
    [Show full text]
  • “Harry – Yer a Wizard” Exploring J
    Wissenschaftliche Beiträge aus dem Tectum Verlag Reihe Anglistik Wissenschaftliche Beiträge aus dem Tectum Verlag Reihe Anglistik Band 6 Marion Gymnich | Hanne Birk | Denise Burkhard (Eds.) “Harry – yer a wizard” Exploring J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Universe Tectum Verlag Marion Gymnich, Hanne Birk and Denise Burkhard (Eds.) “Harry – yer a wizard” Exploring J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Universe Wissenschaftliche Beiträge aus demT ectum Verlag, Reihe: Anglistik; Bd. 6 © Tectum Verlag – ein Verlag in der Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, Baden-Baden 2017 ISBN: 978-3-8288-6751-2 (Dieser Titel ist zugleich als gedrucktes Werk unter der ISBN 978-3-8288-4035-5 und als ePub unter der ISBN 978-3-8288-6752-9 im Tectum Verlag erschienen.) ISSN: 1861-6859 Umschlaggestaltung: Tectum Verlag, unter Verwendung zweier Fotografien von Schleiereule Merlin und Janna Weinsch, aufgenommen in der Falknerei Pierre Schmidt (Erftstadt/Gymnicher Mühle) | © Denise Burkhard Informationen zum Verlagsprogramm finden Sie unter www.tectum-verlag.de Bibliografische Informationen der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Angaben sind im Internet über http://dnb.ddb.de abrufbar. Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available online at http://dnb.ddb.de. Contents Hanne Birk, Denise Burkhard and Marion Gymnich ‘Happy Birthday, Harry!’: Celebrating the Success of the Harry Potter Phenomenon ........ 7 Marion Gymnich and Klaus Scheunemann The ‘Harry Potter Phenomenon’: Forms of World Building in the Novels, the Translations, the Film Series and the Fandom ................................................................. 11 Part I: The Harry Potter Series and its Sources Laura Hartmann The Black Dog and the Boggart: Fantastic Beasts in Joanne K.
    [Show full text]
  • Myth and Mentality and Myth Studia Fennica Folkloristica
    Commission 1935–1970 Commission The Irish Folklore Folklore Irish The Myth and Mentality Studies in Folklore and Popular Thought Edited by Anna-Leena Siikala Studia Fennica Folkloristica The Finnish Literature Society (SKS) was founded in 1831 and has, from the very beginning, engaged in publishing operations. It nowadays publishes literature in the fields of ethnology and folkloristics, linguistics, literary research and cultural history. The first volume of the Studia Fennica series appeared in 1933. Since 1992, the series has been divided into three thematic subseries: Ethnologica, Folkloristica and Linguistica. Two additional subseries were formed in 2002, Historica and Litteraria. The subseries Anthropologica was formed in 2007. In addition to its publishing activities, the Finnish Literature Society maintains research activities and infrastructures, an archive containing folklore and literary collections, a research library and promotes Finnish literature abroad. Studia Fennica Editorial board Anna-Leena Siikala Rauno Endén Teppo Korhonen Pentti Leino Auli Viikari Kristiina Näyhö Editorial Office SKS P.O. Box 259 FI-00171 Helsinki www.finlit.fi Myth and Mentality Studies in Folklore and Popular Thought Edited by Anna-Leena Siikala Finnish Literature Society · Helsinki Studia Fennica Folkloristica 8 The publication has undergone a peer review. The open access publication of this volume has received part funding via a Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation grant. © 2002 Anna-Leena Siikala and SKS License CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International A digital edition of a printed book first published in 2002 by the Finnish Literature Society. Cover Design: Timo Numminen EPUB: Tero Salmén ISBN 978-951-746-371-3 (Print) ISBN 978-952-222-849-9 (PDF) ISBN 978-952-222-848-2 (EPUB) ISSN 0085-6835 (Studia Fennica) ISSN 1235-1946 (Studia Fennica Folkloristica) DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.21435/sff.8 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International License.
    [Show full text]
  • King Lear by William Shakespeare
    King Lear By William Shakespeare ACT I SCENE I. King Lear's palace. Enter KENT, GLOUCESTER, and EDMUND KENT I thought the king had more affected the Duke of Albany than Cornwall. GLOUCESTER It did always seem so to us: but now, in the division of the kingdom, it appears not which of the dukes he values most; for equalities are so weighed, that curiosity in neither can make choice of either's moiety. KENT Is not this your son, my lord? GLOUCESTER His breeding, sir, hath been at my charge: I have so often blushed to acknowledge him, that now I am brazed to it. KENT I cannot conceive you. GLOUCESTER Sir, this young fellow's mother could: whereupon she grew round-wombed, and had, indeed, sir, a son for her cradle ere she had a husband for her bed. Do you smell a fault? KENT I cannot wish the fault undone, the issue of it being so proper. GLOUCESTER But I have, sir, a son by order of law, some year elder than this, who yet is no dearer in my account: though this knave came something saucily into the world before he was sent for, yet was his mother fair; there was good sport at his making, and the whoreson must be acknowledged. Do you know this noble gentleman, Edmund? EDMUND No, my lord. GLOUCESTER My lord of Kent: remember him hereafter as my honourable friend. EDMUND My services to your lordship. KENT I must love you, and sue to know you better. EDMUND Sir, I shall study deserving.
    [Show full text]
  • Angela's Ashes a Memoir of a Childhood by Frank
    Angela's Ashes A Memoir of a Childhood By Frank McCourt This book is dedicated to my brothers, Malachy, Michael, Alphonsus. I learn from you, I admire you and I love you. A c k n o w l e d g m e n t s This is a small hymn to an exaltation of women. R'lene Dahlberg fanned the embers. Lisa Schwarzbaum read early pages and encouraged me. Mary Breasted Smyth, elegant novelist herself, read the first third and passed it on to Molly Friedrich, who became my agent and thought that Nan Graham, Editor-in-Chief at Scribner, would be just the right person to put the book on the road. And Molly was right. My daughter, Maggie, has shown me how life can be a grand adventure, while exquisite moments with my granddaughter, Chiara, have helped me recall a small child's wonder. My wife, Ellen, listened while I read and cheered me to the final page. I am blessed among men. I My father and mother should have stayed in New York where they met and married and where I was born. Instead, they returned to Ireland when I was four, my brother, Malachy, three, the twins, Oliver and Eugene, barely one, and my sister, Margaret, dead and gone. When I look back on my childhood I wonder how I survived at all. It was, of course, a miserable childhood: the happy childhood is hardly worth your while. Worse than the ordinary miserable childhood is the miserable Irish childhood, and worse yet is the miserable Irish Catholic childhood.
    [Show full text]
  • CODEX CELTARUM Celtic Adventure in Faery
    CODEX CELTARUM Celtic Adventure in Faery BY BRIAN N. YOUNG EDITOR: ALICIA STANLEY & TIM BURNS ART: PETER BRADLEY, JASON WALTON ART DIRECTION//LAYOUT/: PETER BRADLEY CARTOGRAPHY: PETER BRADLEY 1818 North Taylor, #143, Little Rock, AR, 72207 email: [email protected] website: www.trolllord.com or www.castlesandcrusades.com Interested in Castles & Crusades ® the role playing game? Want to learn more? There is a large online community of gamers who post home brewed rules, adventure discussion and help incoming players disgest the game and it’s potential. Please visit our online forums at the web address mentioned above and get involved. All are welcome!!! © 2013 Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Castles & Crusades ® is a Registered Trademark of Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. C&C, Castle Keeper, SEIGE engine, Troll Lord Games, and the Castles & Crusades, SEIGE engine, and Troll Lord Games logos are Trademark of Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Art, artwork, cover art, cartography is copyright Peter Bradley of Ravenchilde Illustrations, 2013 or Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. All text is copy- right Brian Young. All other content copyright 2013 Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Castles & Crusades, C&C, Castle Keeper, Troll Lord Games, and the Castles & Crusades and Troll Lord Games logos, and products published by Troll Lord Games are Trademarks of Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America Sample file GWASTRAWT AFWYN BRENHINES Tom Tullis, Ron "Bubba Ho-Tep" Purvi, Julian G Hicks, Matt Hurd SWYDDWR Y LLYS Sebastian Dietz, Marzio Spairani, The Great and Powerful Alpha Wolf Troy Schwaller, Raymond M.
    [Show full text]
  • Rambles in Northumberland and on the Scottish Border
    RAMBLES IN NORTHUMBERLAND AND ON THE SCOTTISH BORDER WILLIAM ANDREW CHATTO CHAPTER I. Of Foreign travel, its advantages and its disadvantages, much may be said on both sides ; but of Home travel, " of journeying through the land to which a man owes his birth, education, and means of living, " the pleasures and advantages are at once so obvious and direct, that to enter into a long dissertation to prove them, would be like a logical argument to demonstrate that health is a blessing, and a contented mind a possession above all price. To a man who feels them, no argument can make the impression deeper or more vivid ; and to him who does not, no process of reasoning can convey that full and perfect conviction which is the result of feeling. Lord Eldon, in 1771, then John Scott, of University College, Oxford, wrote an Essay, " On the Advantages and Disadvantages of Foreign travel" which was ho- noured with a prize ; and judging from his Loidship's own practice " for he has never been out of Britain " we may conclude that in his mind the disadrantages were preponderant. It is perfectly useless to recommend travellings either at home or abroad, to a person in whom ill-temper and discontent are chronic diseases of the mind. Such unhappy persons ought to keep themselves dose at home since to extend their circuit would be only to increase their liability to anaoyance. At some second rate inn they might not have silver forks ; a lefl-legged fellow of a waiter might be officiously annoying ; fOling a glass of ale unasked, bringing in a wet newspaper, carrying luggage to a wrong room, or daring to suggest places in the neighbourhood worth seeing without his counsel being required, for all which high offences the peevish tourist, professedly a man of liberal sentiments and an abolitionist, would, if he had his own way, send the offender for a month to the tread-mill.
    [Show full text]
  • Encounter Tables & Monster Index
    ENCOUNTER TABLES & MONSTER INDEX BY MARK SANDY FRONT COVER: PETER BRADLEY 1818 North Taylor, #143, Little Rock, AR, 72207 email: [email protected] website: www.trolllord.com or www.knightsofthecrusade.com ©2019 Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Castles & Crusades® is a registered Trademark of Chenault & Gray Publishing LLC, d/b/a Troll Lord Games. SIEGE Engine™ is Trademark of Chenault & Gray Publishing LLC, d/b/a Troll Lord Games. Amazing Adventures™ is a Trademark of Jason Vey. The Troll Lord Games, Castles & Crusades, SIEGE Engine, Troll Lord Games logos are Trademarks of Troll Lord Games. The Amazing Adventures logo is Trademark Jason Vey. All Rights Reserved. 2019. Art, artwork,Sample cover art, cartography is copyright Peter Bradley of Ravenchilde Illustrations, 2019 or Troll Lord Games.file All Rights Reserved. All content copyright 2019 Troll Lord Games. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America Sample file RANDOM ENCOUNTER TABLES Within these pages you will find tables for generating random monsters are native to another plane and only appear when encounters. These tables are designed for encounters which summoned. Other monsters reside in a specific terrain or occur on the prime material plane, and are divided both by level environment in which adventures do not commonly travel, ranges (1st-3rd, 4th-7th, 8th-12th, and 13th+) and by area such as Sahuagin and similar creatures which live only in (outdoor/above ground and dungeon/underground). the sea, or the Frostmen who can only live in frigidly cold environs. Most of these types of monsters would only be seen It should be noted that not every monster from the Monsters as part of a planned encounter.
    [Show full text]
  • Eoin Colfer's Magical Fairies
    2009:036 BACHELOR THESIS Eoin Colfer´s Magical Fairies The depiction of fairies in Artemis Fowl compared to folklore and other literature Sara Pettersson Luleå University of Technology Bachelor thesis English Department of Language and Culture 2009:036 - ISSN: 1402-1773 - ISRN: LTU-CUPP--09/036--SE Lower Elements Luleå university of technology 2009-01-15 Department of language and culture E0001S English 3 for teachers Student: Sara Pettersson Abstract The name fairy has been surrounded with mystery and excitement for as long as people have been telling stories about strange and supernatural beings from this world and others. This essay endeavours to find similarities and differences in the magic and portrayal of fairies created by a present day author, Eoin Colfer, compared to the fairies of Celtic legends and Victorian beliefs. In order to fully understand the length of Colfer‟s imagination his fairies will be compared to creations from a few of the fantasy genres biggest names; J.R.R Tolkien, James Barrie and William Shakespeare. In addition this essay aims to discover peculiarities and other distinguishing features in an advanced technological society living just a few kilometres below our feet, where the fairy residents do everything they can to keep mankind from knowing they exist. Luleå university of technology 2009-01-15 Department of language and culture E0001S English 3 for teachers Student: Sara Pettersson TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Project Gutenberg's Essays, 1St Series, by Ralph Waldo Emerson #1 in Our Series by Ralph Waldo Emerson
    Project Gutenberg's Essays, 1st Series, by Ralph Waldo Emerson #1 in our series by Ralph Waldo Emerson Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check the laws for your country before redistributing these files!!! Please take a look at the important information in this header. We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an electronic path open for the next readers. Please do not remove this. This should be the first thing seen when anyone opens the book. Do not change or edit it without written permission. The words are carefully chosen to provide users with the information they need about what they can legally do with the texts. **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** **Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** *These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations* Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and further information is included below. We need your donations. Presently, contributions are only being solicited from people in: Texas, Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, South Dakota, Iowa, Indiana, and Vermont. As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states. These donations should be made to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation PMB 113 1739 University Ave. Oxford, MS 38655 Title: Essays, First Series Author: Ralph Waldo Emerson Release Date: December, 2001 [Etext #2944] [Yes, we are about one year ahead of schedule] Edition: 10 Project Gutenberg's Essays, 1st Series, by Ralph Waldo Emerson *****This file should be named 1srwe10.txt or 1srwe10.zip***** Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, 1srwe11.txt VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 1srwe10a.txt This Project Gutenberg Etext Prepared by Tony Adam [email protected] Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions, all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a copyright notice is included.
    [Show full text]