HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-3-14, Page 2ROBING VERSUS MEN.
now do the robins know
Viten it's time to go?
How can they tellwhen the day is at hand.
To loave t$ t. nests and Sy
Away to the southern, sunny land,
Where the blue is in the aryl'
How do they know
Ere the north winds blow,
Bringing the chill and the leo and $now=
Why do: they never foolishly wait,
Flirting with chance and tempting fate/
Ah, the robins are: Wiser for
Than Goma men aret
They take no chances nor fool around,
Thinking, because today is fair,
That tomorrow good cheer will still abound,
With never a woe nor care
Thinking because things caere their way
In clusters today
Good luck has settled with thou; to etayl,
The robin proceeds to get out of the wet
While the sun is taithlully nhfning yeti
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TSE. 111AN UNDER:
Tit B D. BY
M. QUAD.
Copyright, 1001, by 0.13. Lewis.
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I had been in Paris for a couple of
months, living at a family hotel and
knocking about at my leisure, -when
S made the acquaintance of Felix
Duchene, as he called himself. He
was a man of about 30, and, though
a Frenchman from head. to heel, he
spoke English fairly well He was
not a man wbom I should have select-
ed as a friend, and yet there was a
something about hint which interested
me. He had traveled extensively, met
with many adventures and was a good
talker. I came to know him as a Tuan
of nerve and courage, and, though I
feared he would turn out to be a para-
site, nothing of the sort bappened. FIe
seemed to have plenty of money of his
owe and never asked for the loan of a
franc.
I had known Duchene for three or
four weeks when we visited a dance
hall on one of the outer boulevards
one night. The place was a resort for
tough men and bad women and prom-
ised a phase of Parisian life I had not
pers were to be signed, and a week bit
er the floor would be in our possession.
That nicht the two of us attended,
the theater and afterward had suppet;
and I haven't the slightest doubt that.
Vey wine was drugged. While I was
not made helpless, nay head seemed ae.
big as a barrel. I could hardly keep
my eyes open, and if Duchene bad not
put me in a .Gab and instructed the
driver I should never have found my
wily to the hotel. I had to be helped
to my room, and I fell upon the beck
dressed as I was, and was instantly
asleep. I had been asleep two hours
when I awoke as keen as a fox. The
effects of the drug had vanished, and
as 1 got out of bed to undress I foetid
my legsb again. all riglit again. I was fully
undressed and ready to get between the
sheets when my ear caught a sound
from under the bed. I at ouee stooped
down for a look, and my eyes rested
upon a man lying on the broad of his
back. I had him out in a second. Tt
seemed to me as if I had five tunes
my ordinary strength, and, though the
fellow struggled furiously and cut my
arm with a knife, 1 grasped his throat
and choked him till he lay like one
dead. It was only when 1 bad struck
a light that I found the intruder to
be Duchene. He had come in through
the wiudow which opened on a ve-
randa. Ile had been working at the
lock of my trunk when 1 macle some.
noise on awakening, and he had rolled
himself under the bed. He had come
for that bag of gold, and lie had meant
to do for me if necessary.
I alarmed the house, the police were
sent for, and the fellow was taken
away, but it was a good hour before
he recovered his senses. Iris story was
entirely false, and he had put up a
job to rob me. It was my testimony
that gave him five years in prison, but
after it was all over and be had been
sent away I was a bit sorry for him.
He could tell a good story, had a laugh
which made you laugh with him, and
few men of his class in Paris or else-
where could order a better dinner. He
was not a grasping man withal. He
had planned to rob me of $2,000 where
another would have raised the figure
to $,000.
The Gentle Art of Letter Writiar .
•The classic age of letter writing, like
that of chivalry, is gone, although no
Burke has been found yet to utter its
splendid funeral oration. Correspond-
ence on
orrespond-
eneeon business, hurried notes contain-
ing invi'•ations to dinner or acceptances
thereof—these are the missives which
fill the bag of the hitter carrier. The
love letter, we presume, still holds its
sway, and, if we are to judge from the
revelations of breach of promise cases,
it is full of sugary sentimentalism as
in the days of Lydia Languish. But
the letter as it bas passed into litera-
ture, the letter whose highest claim to
be treated as art is that it conceals art,
the letter as written by -William Cow-
per, er Oliver Goldsmith, or Horace
Walpole, or Miss Burney -that charm-
ing epistle intended only for the affec-
tionate perusal of friends and yet of
such value to the historian of life and
manners—shall we say that it has dis-
appeared from the busy modern world,
killed by the "railway and the steam-
ship and the thougbts that shake man-
kind?' As least, it is now but a rare
product, a fragile flower scarcely able
to maintain itself in our altered social
soil.
Correspondence from being a cherish-
ed art and solace has in our day tend-
ed to become what is called in slang a
"grind." it is "snippety," like the
cheap newspapers, a sort of "bits" or
"cuts," giving hints which require to be
filled out, only that the receiver has
hardly time for that mental process.
Truth to tell, a great deal of our; letter
writing is boredom, the source of irrita-
tion and weariness to those who are
called on to undertake it.
rlE FELLGW STRUGGLED FIIR100SLY AND
CUT MY ARD,
yet met. We found a rough crowd
indeed, and the evening was not half"
over when a burly big fellow deliber-
ately picked a quarrel with me. I was
giving him the worst of it when he
drew a knife and rushed upon me.
Duchene, who was standing quietly by,
knocked the scoundrel senseless, and,
to my surprise, we were utt molested
by the half dozen friends of tbe vic-
tim wbo had been urging Jilin to fin-
ish me. I came to know later on that
the whole thing was a put up job, but
I looked upon it then as a brave action
on the part of my acquaintance and
gave him my gratitude and friendship.
I had never questioned bin) as to why
he was in Paris, where or how he
lived or what aim he had in life, and
he had never dropped a hint. •I had
a secret belief that he was a gambler
and a sharper, but to me be was as
straightforward as could be hoped for.
About two weeks after the event at
the dunce ball Duchene told me his
story, or a part of it. He was a pro-
fessional gambler, or bad been up to
a few months before he met me. Then
his eyesight bad gone back on him and
he had been obliged to abandon the
business. I had observed that be was
nearsighted and had been obliged to
favor his eyes.
A year before meeting me Duchene
and a partner had "roped"`a rich young
fellow into a game and skinned him
out of what would be about $50,000 in
American money. They were then pa
eupying'rooms in a certain bouse he in-
dicated, and, fearing trouble from the
victim, who had declared himself de-
frauded, the money had been bidden
under the floor. Trouble came. Both
inen were arrested, and, while Duchene
got a year in prison, the other man died
of pneumonia while waiting his trial. i
On leaving prison Duchene at once,
took steps to secure bis money, but
found the floor in possession of an ar-
tificial dowerwho held a lease.
ifr maker w
The place could not he entered and •
searched, and the $50,000 still rested
beneath the floor of the front room. It
would take $1,500 to buy the lease and
oust the flower maker and another $500
to put in a stock of something to throw
the police off the scent. Duchene could
not raise the money, nor had he yet
suet a man he dared trust. Elis propo-
hition to me was that I furnish the $2,-
000 and receive $10,000 of the hidden
money as my reward, Had he offered
to go halves I:think I hould have look-
ed upon It as a "plant" and thrown it
lover, but in offering me a sixth portion
he seemed to, show good business tact.
It was a big return on the investment—
big. enough to satisfy any one—and I
gave him a favorable answer, at once.
Re had already sounded the flower
maker asto the lease, and if my mon-
ey was raised tbe papers could be sign-
ed three days Tater. I had a good bit
of cash at nay' bankers, and on the see -
Mad day after heariag.Duchene's story,
I drew oat $ ,0d0 in gold and placed
the bag in my trunk, N•Qst day the Oa
From Ir'inger% to Forks.
In olden times fingers served well
enough to convey food to the mouth,
and a divided gourd was an acceptable
drinking vessel, but when fashionable
aspirations seized our ancestors they
scorned these, implements of nature,
and even the Pacific islanders pulled
their hair, of which they had a gener-
ous abundance, in their anxiety to de-
vise more seemly methods. They final- P
ly manufactured forks that looked like
skewers, and out of the bamboo ey
manufactured knives. The Indians,
proverbially slow in adopting modern
ways, stili. eat without knives or forks,
although they have permitted the use
of spoons. These were first made of
shells and the rinds of gourds. Later
handles were inserted, and, having
passed numerous stages, knives, forks
and spoons have reached the present
elaborately ornamented binds now in
general use.
The'' cup is probably the most ancient
of all domestic utensils. Its earliest
forth was simply the half closed band
or the folded leaf. Then followed cups
made of sea shells or rinds of fruit cut
in halves. Later appeared cups of
metal, lacquer and china. For centu-
ries the sup has been made the expres-
sion of art and luxury, and the most
precious metals, combined with the an
tisau's most consummate skill, are now
commonly employed'in their manufac-
ture.
DRESS AND FASHION.
DARING CAPRICES AND AIRY FANCIES
THAT ENLIVEN THE MODES.
Bite of OrigfnalitY In Hate. -Tile
Ia.elgu of the Rore on Coiffure auce,
Ever -new Gowan ---Pretty Jabots and
liquify Tune Knots.
Fashions have settled Into a certaiu.
well regulated state adverse to any
radical changes, as is to be expected at
this season. Nevertheless the tradi-
tional spice of dress manifests itself in
caprices and conceits, whose charming
unexpectedness speaksof tbe sparkling
faney of the Parisian modistes. From
Paris comes the tale of new white
CIIAPEAII IN SHADES OF MAUVE.
cloth toques and hats in rough frieze,
trimmed with flower's and a ;old bow
on one side. Two fancies of the Rue
de la Paix by their daring °aud'or�iginal-
ity serve to arouse the weary devotees
of fashion to renewed interest. One is
a marvelous confection of felt, velvet,
ribbon and flowers, all carried out in
shades of mauve; the other a dashing
picture hat of black felt, with long
black plume and bow of gold gauze
ribbon.
And just here may be sung the glo-
ries of the, rose, and'especially the gold
rose. In white and colors come the
roses. One rose may,rest upon the
forehead, a very chic style; a single
blossom may be tusked daintily in be-
hind the ear, or a' woman may be a
veritable queen of roses, with half a
dozen arranged at fancy. To be bien
coiffe and, for the most part, elaborate-
ly coiffe, is one of fashion's most strict
requirements this season, and the rose
is the freshest frill to that end which
the mysterious power that makes all
modes has launched for a long time. It
is almost an old tale to speak'of the
large white ribbon bows, the pink or
blue bows, the velvet bows and the
dainty Little scarfs of black or white'
silk muslin twisted in waving'tresses.
Wreaths of silk or velvet leaves there
are in the clever ornaments of the mil-
liners and of silver in the costlier
achievements of the jewelers. These
necessitate a coil low at the neck, and
the ornament emulates a Greek wreath.
For ball dresses chiffon and tulle
roses are the rage, and these are some-
times arranged as a border to the skirt,
which is of chiffon, mousseline de sole,
crepe de chine or new kind of rather
heavy crape. Surely Dame Fashion
never studies the question of expendi-
ture, for the long skirts of today are
subject to utter destruction in the ball-
room. Evening skirts, even for danc-
ing, are worn longer than ever. Their
only amelioration lies in the multifa-
rious flounces with which these long
skirts are bordered from a little below'
the knee. to the hem, inside and outside,
and these keep the skirt out,from'the
feet and prevent utter destruction.
A worn waist can be rejuvenated
i somewhat by a lace bolero or one of
the pretty jabots or fluii y tulle bows,
of which it would be bard to have' too
many. These can be made of odds or
ends of lace.:Nothing lends such : an
effect of freshness to the neat -tailor
made frock, which has perhaps see!,
better days, as the addition of a:' tulle
bow, and if one has not the Parisian fa
better days, •as the addition of a tulle
into a "noend" trifles of this sort are
with rather high collar. Around the ,tone o reproo uta the .same tune ed selfishness am m;ratitude on Gus'
to midwinter and past, hardly had their I -
EVENING HOODS.'
An They Are Worn This winter In
Town and Country.
With the disappearance of the even•
ing bonnet many of the' fashionable
women go to dinners, dances and the
opera with uncovered heads. It is cer-
tainly the simplest way,. though one
to risk. a cold now and then la the
does
hurried flight from house to carriage.
Niven the flimsiest scarf will disar-
range the coil -fere just a trifle, and,
with the growing popularity of so lav-
ishly ornamenting the piled up coils of
bail•, 0 head covering becomes a bit
difficult to adjust comfortably and eas-
ily.
`The dainty scarfs and Hoods appeal
more especially to out of town people,
though these are not by any means the
only ones :who wear them, Fancy' lace
and embroidered Scarfs are both pretty
and becoming. These are lightly
thrown over the_ head in any becoming
fashion, and, if the scarf is long enough;
one end may be wound about the
throat and shoulders.
A• narrow scarf of puffed liberty silk
with lace stripes has a double edge of
chenille loops, staking a pretty frame
for the face. This scarf is' neleher wide
enotigh nor long enough to be worn in.
more than oue fashion—simply thrown
over the head and knotted or crossed
under the' chin.
The mantilla scarf is of a larger size
and admits of variety in the mode of
draping. A .pale pink or blue tucked
liberty silk with stripes of black
French lace rtin with: gold thread
makes a pretty scarf. This is edged
all around with a double fringe of
chenille loops, •which is soft and'grace-
ful and makes a` dainty finish.
For bitterly cold nights, when even
these airy scarfs; are scarcely consider-
ed warm enough for rise, a hood of
some new cut anci fashion' is most com-
fortable. - These are not clumsy af-
fairs. Instead they are soft and light
and very effective when worn by a
pretty woman and one whose youthful
face possesses a sash of coquetry. One
design something like an old fashioned
l!
SILK AND CHIFFON OPERA' HOOD. the rest of them desperadoes. 'I've got
bonnet, illustrated by the New York e way, to do, an Gus got,lass an mss
Herald in connection with this de relatives by marriage among the Crows sacreed him with the butcher knife au
i and ,Ogallalas, an°I've drunk more al -then set fire to the house an lit out.
scription of evening hoods and wraps, kali water an eat more dog an buffalo.
is of lace striped pale blue silk, the
When old man Haines got bash an
hood:vases s cut together and fitting 1 berry than any white man this side of found out what had: happened, be said
h head loosely. - It is lined with` blue the big Mizzoura. I didn't bring MY that: it wuz enough to make a man lose,
the youtfit in here in the spring of '99. What
silk of some soft weave, and all around • did you- expect ale to do —:give that
patience, but he wuz sot in his ways,
the outside edge of both the hood and an be said that be would make a good
m greasy; tin tagged coyote my stool{ of citizen of Gus in spite of hill an high
cape is a full plaited ruffle of lace eds.- I cigarettes to keep him good tetopered?" water: So he went out afterllim again
ed chiffon. A jaunty 'bow of blue rib -b
An if you had you wouldn't have 1• 1 1
top, and the hood Is tied with broad
cashes of chiffon with ruffled edges.
Another style of hood is one that
looks, like a large puff of soft striped
silk lightly wadded and lined_ with' a
plain color. The front edge turns back,
AT TWILIGHT.;
In the old home alone at twilight gray,
As night Colds her robes o'er Thanksgiving day,
i viii dreaming again by tho firolight'$ w
The beautiful dreams of the long ago—
Long ago, when my' wayward feet
Wandered mid dowers wild and sweet,
V • heart were olden and skies were blue
When d .. g
And lite reflected each glorious hue,
When the'. dearest joy of the gladsome earth
Was the blush of arbutus, the violet's birth,
And the deepest of all my childish woes
Was watching the bright petals fall frons the
Pule is the blossom I blushing knew
And its leaf overflowing with tears of dew.
The violet sobs as she droops her head, ��
"You loved me not as you loved the dead.
Rambling o'er mossy ruins gray
la the eglantine of the years,' and today .
Its bright thorns gleam in the autumn sun,
But its blossoms have fallen one by one.
Ah, I know full well, for my thoughts will stray,
As I sit alone in the shadows gray,
Though the arbutus blossoms and sweetbrier
grows,
That every petal is 'gone from the rose.
rot him. He hitd two bogs that wuz,
jest like him, an his Ole woman wua
worse',u he wuz.
"One fine, cloudy evenin Gus Minnick
an Todd Blakey conies along an rustles
ten lead of old Haan I eineei' ponies
an wuz hikin south with 'em when
they met up with a crowd of inquirin
strangers who were driftin heck down
Prairie Dog into ICatasas after an on -
successful pursoot of some north bol',21i1
hors thieves. The boys flail too hinny
brands in their bunch, an one of the
stranglers reckernized Blakey, so they
tied their feet under' their horses'
bellies an headed Per the nearest tim-
her. Thea give Blakey the first swing -
in an wuz adjueLrn the grass role to
Gus' neck when old man Haines coupes
up with his biggest boy, Arch. They
had been hot an close on the trail all
the time.
"As soon as they explained who they
wuz an idonterfied their ponies, the
boss strangler allowed that there •
wuzn't no reason why the ceremonies
shouldn't perceed, an he throwed the
dIAAAAAAAAAAAAAA,1AAAAAAJAs' other end of the rope over the limb.
Y "'lyhy,' says the old man, 'you hain't
yp goin to hang that poor boy, air you`?'
Atl�6. " `I reckon I am,' says the boss strati.
y Ijy�/r i i 9�
l,lu, cheerful an gay.
"'I don't' believe it helps a man to
losi
p hang flim,' says Maines. 'You; jest give
him up to me, an I'll take him back to •
•��'�`t��IpV®®V�'1f'VV�'p��P�/®® the ranch with me an surround him
The reel gentleman with the feathers with moral influences an keep him out
in his bat and the telegraph wire of bad bring t He's got, moil in flim;
an Ili bring it out of him an make a
bracelets became too Importunate in useful eiterzen of him.'
his demands for cigarettes, and as be "Well, the long an short of It wuz,
had been detected in the act of appro- that he begged so lOnd that they let
pleating `a wooden handled skinning Minnick go, an old man Haines started
knife, valued $1.50, five minutes be- back with him. On the way he talked
fore the post trader walked around the to Gus like a father an told him how
counter and kicked :him energetically, wrong it wuz to rustle cayuses when
out of the store and half way around he could get 'em bimself by workin
the bay corral. It spoke volumes for. ` honiist fer 'em. He made Gus Pres
the post trader's activity that he was ent of the ten that ' be had stole as 'a
able to do this, for it leo easy matter starter an offered him good wages to
to keep within kicking range of a prop-: work on the ranch.
erly scared Crow Indian for the dis-'" staid there fer two months,:an
tance that he covered,` to say nothing then he got inter a argyment with the
of performing the act itself. There- biggest boy about'breakin a colt 'ap
fore the post trader was breathless slot him up an lit out. Old man Haines
when he returned and had to He on the wuz ;real 'provoked aboutt, but he
counter with his head on a bolt of pink jumped otIa' horse an put' out after
striped calico to recover himself. The Minnick an overtook him at Box' El -
old bullwhacker, who 12ad been watch- der. As soon as Gus seen him he
ing the race from bis seat on a nail
throwed down'on:him with a vfinches
Leg. with a grin on his wrinkled ma- ter, bat the old man told. Lim to behave
ma-
hogany visage, complimented the ad himself an quit moniteyin with fire-
vance ':agent of commerce on his arms.
achievement. "`I sh'd think you'd seen the evil of
"I wuz suthen of a, foot racer myself them sort of'actions after killin Hen'
when I wuz younger an limberer than ry,' he said.
what I' am now," be said, "but I dunno "`Did I kill him?' says Gus.
that I ever seen the time that I could "'Yes, you did,' says the old reran as
have done better than- that. I'm re- severe as he knowecl bow. 'Au' I sh'd
gardin it purely as,a physical feat, think you'd be asbamed of yourself. -I
however. I'm not sayin' that You don't wonder you, felt as if you didn't
showed a strikin amount' of jedgment. want to look me in the face after seely
When Young Man Afraid er His actions. All the same, I don't want
Breechclout has got you knotted up you straggiin off where you'll get inter f
with green rawhide an the squaws are bad comp'ny, so you'. jest come i.•ight"
fixing the fire ter the grand barbecue, back home with me. We've got to have
mebbe you will regret your pernishus them colts.:brol:e, an we're short hand -
activity an cuss the day that you bum -ed now.'
bled the'' proud spirit; of the noble In-
jun"Well, warrior. Is'ehis shebang insured?" old man wuz, an he went back, an they
"You was never introduced to me," all avoided the subjec' of Henry, so's
rejoined the post trader. "I've got a not to hurt his feelin's. He staid on a
half inch of ,callous on the soles of my month 'longer, an then because; the
feet, an I come into this country from: old woman :burned his sakes fer him
the headwaters of Bitter creel: along he brained her with the skillet. The
of J. W. Haneber an Ed Phernettonan other boy told him that that wuzn't no
bon is fastened on the right side of the forfuted his friendship,"returned the' an coaxed him bac., an everybody
said that Gus was a changed man from
old bullwhacker. "As it. is I've got an , that time forward, as meek as Moses
ides his heart is bad lawon't
an see
his feelin's'the same as a white man q p
,
an a come aD.,honust as the day."
you no more. An Injun has got
"Are they livin there together yet?"
inquired thepost trader with someau
has, an I reckon you -would git hostile ; terest. •
if any hombre booted you from blazes. The old bullwhacker took a large
showing, the lining, tend' at either side
are knots and long, broad sashes of the to breakfast because' you ast 'him fer chew of tobacco before replying. Then
plain silk. The style- is quaint andrthe means of soothin your nerves., You he said: "I wuz bopin you wouldn't
pretty, but none style
nearly' so practical as injered'that Crow in a sensitive spot, ' list •me that question, becuz it might
one with a cape attached. Ike. „ seem to milertate against my the'ry.
I The lovely little evening capes and I. done my best to, said the post The truth is that the old man sent Gus
collarettes are fascinating in the ex trader.
"He may b
elong to the Badface band to .town one day, an Gus come back
treme and are convenient to use when, with a jug of whisky fer himself, but
larger wraps •are too
clumsy.: One very an have hair in his tepee,' continued he forgot the old man's smokin ter•
the old bullwhacker in the same gI'a,ve backer. The old man said that it show
to be found in all the sho s, Furs Pretty design is of skilled mousseline I L f b t
The Number 4.
There are four cardinal pointe, four
winds, four quarters of the moon, four
seasons, four figures in the quadrille, j
four rules of arithmetic, four suits of `
cards, four quarters to the hour; four;
legs for furniture, most animals go on
four legs, the dead are placed between
four planks, the prisoners between foitr
walls. We have four incisor and four
canine teeth, and our forks have four
prongs; all =finale, when butchered,
are eut into four quateters the violin,
greatest of all string: instruments, liar
but four strings; four of a kind is a
pretty good hand at poker even if they
fere only fo'urro,
, up
11 •
BLACK PICTURE !AT WITH GOLD BAND.
opportunity on account of mild weath-
er, although worn in profusion as boas,
collarettes and various neck pieces. But
cold weather brings out sthe handsome
fur wraps, the new blouse, the popular
short jacket and the long coat of broad-
tail,. Persian lamb or ,sealskin, with re-
vers and collar of a contrasting bue.
It may be safely predicted that the
first note of change in the early spring
fashions will be struck in the alteration
of the sleeve. This seems destined to
become less tight, and Already there is,
a distinct tendency to a return to more
generous proportions. Puffs are begin-
ning to assert themselves again on the
elbow ancl below, while 'undersleeves
are att established mode for dressy
waists.
Brown ;Jetty.
Put alternate layers of bused apples
and bread crumbs In e pudding dish,
sprinkling each layer of bread crumbs
With sugar and cinnamon rind putting
bits of butter here and there. Add one.
half cupful of eels water and bake till
brown.
he's a. human, an as a human it's you,. ' part, an he allowed that he must be
thou plaited ruffles, one a`trifle shorter Pay o ex en a rig an of feller-: poor material anyway, an be had Sc
than the other and both finished with ship to him instid of the sole of your the best that he could with him, btu
an edging of black French' lace. The number nine. Hain'tthey got no Sun -that settled it. They wuz'standin by
long stole ends are of the'same plait -
the'
school liberries out on Bitter the woodpile at the time, an the Gid;
ing, with, several rows of the lace across you never read about man lass the ax. I come along jest in
creek? Hain't
the bottom. the settler who found a poor, . tarin time to assist at the funeral.
Perhaps the oddest and prettiest cape redskin out In the snow plum exhaust- "Still I never took the, old man's
is the' one made of hale pink chiffon ed an took hila inter bis shack an fed view.:'- I reckon that Gus jest forgot." .,1
put on in shirred petal shape, the whole him up a whole lot an warmed him an
thing like one huge crush rosea When then turned him loose with a grub
Worn, the head forme the center of the stake,•an when the Two (Kettle outfit Good Advice; Bard to Follow.
flower.: exhoomed the tomahawk an .raised Extreme worry comes from trying to
merry Cain scaipin an burnin through bear an the cares of a lifetime at once
Notes From The Jewelere, Circular. the paleface settlements an' the good: instead of letting each day's evil be y;
The old time pouncet which spreads hearted granger was raked in the In- sufficient unto itself. If we, could live
abroad sweet odors is one of the inno jun that he had Saved sashays in an our whole life In a few hour's, it n1jgl)t
vations. It is usually a ball of per rescoos him from a turf"ble death?" be consistent to think it all over 111 one :.
forated or pierced gold or silver at- "I've read them stories," said the night. There is no past, there is uo
tached to the long chain or bracelet. post trader. future, for doing or accomplishing.
Tiniest gold or silver mesh purses, "But you don't believe 'ens," said the The present time alone is for action,
whichcan hold at most two: silver old bullwhacker. "You ain't sanguine and the order is and always will been0
concernin thegood that there is inyour thin at a time. This one thin must
dimes, are among trinkets that may be g m T s g
attached to tbe chain, feller man. If you git a bad deal, you'be done on the instant in whatever• cir-
decline 1.o chip In an lay down' your, •cumstances we find ourselves.
band instil of callin fer cards an draw- I Not that we should be forgetful of
in to the ace." I the past or careless of the future. The
"I don't draw to no two spot in the' fernier has been our faithful school-
eiS-
ho a of com lean a flush. r' is the
School -
hope p master; the latter .holds. to t
"Well, my the'ry is that there ain't sues of life. , That we may act intelli-
no galoot so low down bat Iftreati essential for
w you gently in the present It is ess
him with kindness an k e hl close the future
p m -lost us to Look forward as Par as,
herded he will show the'o 1 but not
y ted, to,
god that's s in can reasonably be predicted,
bine. Did I ever tell you about old worry.
Ulan lIt ines an Gus Minnick? Well, A degree of anxiety may be fotndea
it goes to prove what I wuz a-sayfn. upon facts that point almost inevitably;
Old man Haines lived out on Blue to futtire difficulties, but a large part.
creek apiecepabove .:..here It'ttroublegroundless,'
yr empties of the :fol ecast of is gI
Into the I"latte, opposite the month of as 1e proved when things do not turn
Ash Helloes where Hai'ne clean upr' uxiet is al•
Harney ed out as expected. Ove a y
the Sioux. Ilewuz 'est. theyars
jest abort the meet ways crossing bridges before
(tene ail
ey legit oldduck that ever� tipped revelled, and it will stay awalz
A' l . . , , .. h . , . u e.'
`tough sad with a liall�y: team or, night borrowing trouble from the r
tIulis: Long surtcrin wuzn't no name mote futu�
edge of the cape are two deep actor- 1 t t d th 'lith d
Short lengths of heavy silver chains
ending in elaborate belle "can be looped
about the wrist as bracelets
Fancy lorgnette chains eonsist of
daintiest blossoms in enamel, with pre-
cious stone centers.
Chalcedony, it peculiarly pleasing soft
green stone; is one of the most taking
novelties displayed this season.;
Barrettes afford a pleasing variation.
In. hair clasps. The long and large,
oitpne9n
, oval shapes seem decided favor -
Very fine flexible chain fobs. daintily
mounted with:: earls are adapted o
� P to
ladles' use.
sPnarI and diamond
diamon1 c
o1
tars Of many
ioWS remain Pashonnile,
despite all'..
now claimants for gavot In neekweili'.
a
at
ie
ee
so
Pa
ne
yh'
re
eX
bit
the
yo
sti
tui
drat
wlr
nil
n1a
sw
ab,
in
col
lie
sir
thi
oir
I11
the
stir
a,
flee
clef