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I've had steady work in this business eight years, now, ever since the circus came to my town out in Ohio and made me the offer, but that's no sign I can be in it eight years longer. Sure I got a few dollars saved." "Well, whatta you know a big tent like you?" "Ain't a big tent like me human, Mr. Jastrow?

M. Jastrow: Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice in Babylonia and Assyria, New York, 1911, p. 210.

Just looka the whole fields out there, so still like like a old horse standing up dozing. Smell! Listen to the little birds! Ain't we happy out here, me and my boy that's getting well so fine?" Then Jastrow the Granite Jaw began to whimper, half-moans engendered by weakness. "Put me out of my misery. Shoot!" "Jas Jas ain't that just an awful way for you to talk?

The necessity for the substitution of her name in the later version is thus obvious, and we have already noted how simply this was effected. Cf. also Jastrow, Hebr. and Bab. Trad., p. 336. Gilg. Epic, XI, l. 123.

There was a new breeze, spicily cool. Miss Hoag breathed out, "Ain't this something grand?" "Giddy-ap!" cried the Baron, slappity-slappity at the great boulder of the Granite Jaw's head. "Giddy-ap!" They plowed forward, a group out of Phantasmagoria as motley a threesome as ever strode this side of the Land of Anesthesia. "How do you like it at Mrs. Bostum's boarding-house, Mr. Jastrow?

"Is it you, Mr. Jastrow? Let me go in, please." "In one moment. I have something to say to you something you ought to hear." "Can't it be said on the other side of the door? I am cold very cold, Mr. Jastrow." It was his saving hint, but he would not take it. "No, it must be said to you alone.

"You'll spy upon a membeh of my family, will you, seh!" he stormed. "Out with you, bag and baggage, befo' I lose my tempeh and forget what is due to this young lady you have insulted, seh, with your infamous proposals! Faveh me instantly, while you have a leg to run with! Go!" Jastrow disappeared; and when the door closed behind him Virginia faced her irate clan-chief bravely.

This is the first volume of the "Conduct of Mind" series, the purpose of which, as stated by its editor, Professor Joseph Jastrow, in his introduction to the series, is "to provide readily intelligible surveys of selected aspects of the study of mind and its applications." The present work contains seven chapters, which were originally prepared as "semi-popular addresses."

They may comfort themselves with the thought, however, that it is no disgrace to make mistakes and errors of this kind; for, as Professor Jastrow pointed out: Fact and Fable in Psychology, p. 148. "The matter is in some aspects as much a technical acquisition as in the diagnosticating of a disease.

"Yah, yah!" he cried, dancing in the net of skirt and waggling his hands from his ears. "Yah, yah!" The Granite Jaw smoothed down the outraged rear of his head, eyes rolling and smile terrible. "Wow!" he said, making a false feint toward him. The Baron, shrill with hysteria, plunged into a fold of Miss Hoag's skirt. "Don't hurt him, Jastrow. He's so awful little! Don't play rough."