United States or Niue ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


You can't expect to do all the taxin'. The wholesalers learnt about the profits that you an' others like ye was makin', an' they concluded that they needed a part of 'em. Of course they had to have their luxuries, an' they're taxin' you they couldn't afford to have 'em if they didn't. Don't complain. "'I'll come out all right, he says. 'I'm goin' to raise my whole schedule fifteen per cent.

Be I taxin' your patience over the limit?" said David, breaking off in his story and addressing Mrs. Cullom more directly. "No, I guess not," she replied; "I was jest thinkin' of a circus I went to once," she added with an audible sigh.

He got out, took the four and sixpence from his pocket, and gave Jim two shillings for a tip. "Going all the way back to-night?" asked he, as he wriggled out of the coat, and handed it over with the goggles. "No," said Jim. "I'll stop at the last pub we passed for the night. There ain't no use over taxin' a car." "Well, good night to you," said Jones.

We old cow-punchers don't care whether the town grows or not, but these hyer bankers and truck-farmers are all for raisin' the price o' land and taxin' us quiet fellers out of our boots." Virginia winced a little at this, for it flashed over her that all the women with whom she had grown up spoke very much in this fashion using breeding terms almost as freely as the ranchers themselves.

Reminds me o' that verse from Zechariah, 'I will show them no mercy, saith the Lord, but I will deliver every man into the hand of his neighbor. Now the baron business has generally been lucrative, but here in Pointview there was too much competition. We were all barons. Everybody was taxin' everybody else for his luxuries, an' nobody could save a cent nobody but me an' Eph Hill.

It means both sexes when it relates to punishment, taxin' property, obeyin' the laws strictly, etc., etc., and then it goes right on the very next minute and means men only, as to wit, namely, votin', takin' charge of public matters, makin' laws, etc. "I tell you it takes deep minds to foller on and see jest to a hair where the division is made. It takes statesmanship.

An' if th' hat's not handy I go without it. "I bet ye th' idee iv taxin' bachelors started with th' dear ladies. But I say to thim: 'Ladies, is not this a petty revenge on ye'er best frinds? Look on ye'er own husbands an' think what us bachelors have saved manny iv ye'er sisters fr'm. Besides aren't we th' hope iv th' future iv th' instichoochion iv mathrimony?

Men take wimmen's money, as they did here, and use it to uplift themselves, and lower her, like taxin' her heavily and often unjustly and usin' this money to help forward unjust laws which she abominates. And so it goes on, and will, until women are men's equals legally and politically." "Ahem you present things in a new light. I never looked at this matter with your eyes."

The editors of journals are marching in the throng; and old and war-worn colonels are teetering along; and friends of Andrew Jackson and Jefferson, now waxin' a trifle old, are taxin' their dusty throats with song.

It means both sexes when it relates to punishment, taxin' property, obeyin' the laws strictly, etc., etc., and then it goes right on the very next minute and means men only, as to wit, namely, votin', takin' charge of public matters, makin' laws, etc. "I tell you it takes deep minds to foller on and see jest to a hair where the division is made. It takes statesmanship.