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Exeter Advocate, 1902-7-24, Page 22 CONFUSION . . OF CASTE. elt lte******esteilettite Or Gentility Vs. tit Nobility of Soul. to. (i• wv9-"WieWefieset—T4Weeee+4-44efeeseees—ideereliteetiere CHAPTER XXIV. The break had come. gene ter a little while Dorcas drooped ; and then the inevitable necessitiee of eer cominou daily woze. surrounded het agein hi the old way, Inalang de- niands upon her again. as they bad done in the time before Prank ceme, , heaped her to drop gradually and in- eensibly once inore hack into Om life that she seemed to have loped Out, of so wildiy for a little while -1 that familiar We that had been so monotoneus. and yetso full of peace; so oneveutful. yet so Mil of a* quiet thenkfule.e.es. In her heart thel gisi was eheugedbut outwardly' there ceased soon to be any change at an in tier. Tito old things went on again as if there had been no beak in their placid tiew, and oule she herself knew that between her preeent and her former elle there lee, a wide gulf of separation. parte Mg that. present from the past cleerly AR a rtver parts ite two shores, With a. Bente of palsied mlfere- preach, gradually Poreae began to tre to give her bort ono more to the work that, during those %teas weilo Frank had been with tier, elm had performed only meehanicaily. Perhape it was difficult to sit for hours now' in that gelee etinen, with a mind devoted to eotnething that Wa4 not. Pratte : but a remoreeful tenderness for her father made her at least struggle bravely to do it, the conseiouseese that someone bad come between them. to xuake ea longer first to her, rising within her a, thoueana time with often an almost paeslowate paui and pity. If Frant came back how should she ever he able to tele her father ? Ale "Used to Ulla. It be eiteue t Bet he would not come, she elowee seed. It was ie rcely so muds fear of waist :Merest happen in the future that paineci and troubled her as a mil- repro:satins! consciousness Of what had happened airsiady-ot the fact that Prank had become 'dearer to her than her father -the three Wetgis' lover shearer than the father who had lived in her life for nineteen year. This was the bitterest pain else car- ried with her, the thought. ihat basmted her when she put ber arms about ber fetherni neck -that bet a &seer of remorse into ovet7 else she gem bim, and every tender word that passed her lips, She was dereivive hem she thought.. It might. bo all inevitable, but none the lees for that did her heart accuse her for it. "Ought 1 to tell ben ?" she thoeglit to hermit again and again : but evbeu see eew his undisturbed content ehe could not do it. So, in her penitence and pity, though she told her father nothing, she grew to devote herself to him more even than she had donor in the days before Prank came. She could only in this way show her self-re- proact and her tenderness, and he, tie was naturah saw nothing but the tenderness, and never suspected any other feeling. Sometimes, perhaps, he thought she was a little graver titan she used to be ; but she was growing to be a, woman now, he pro- bably argued, and, as was only right, was putting away .childish things; and, if she was grave, so much tee mom was she fit to be hie companion. As these months, that were so full of quiet happiness to hint, paseed on, he came to associate her more and more in every thing he did. They spent the larger part of e-ery day together •, he talked to her of every thing that was nearest to his heart P • he made her of service to hiin in his work in. a hundred trivial and yet to hint delightful ways. "What should I do without my Dorcas to help me ?" he often said to her, with a pride and tender- ness that stabbed Ler like a knife. Sometimes during these months Letty would talk to Dorcas of Prank, and bring a, brief satisfac- tion to the hunger that the girl al- ways felt to hear his name. The two women would sit together, and talk of the things that he had said and done, and Letty would praise him. In them days Dorcas knew that she loved her mother better than she had ever done before, because her moth- er loved Frank; -they , had this bond of sympathy between them -the strongest boed. (though Letty did not know it) that ever had drawn them to each other. . "I ought not to let her talk of him," the girl said often to herself ; "it only makes me think and hope." 'And yet, again and again, she would devise sammes to make Letty -talk of hhn ; and the kind, simple soul would dwell upon his goodness ,and his pleasantness, and, with happy pride, would recall the fact a, hun- dred tithes of his faithful remem- brame of them through all these years -till Dore•as* heart would tercet. and burn. Yee -he had come. Leek to them wieheaged after so malty years; could she forget that. or help thanking God for ? Auii the days were 'leasing on-mumPer egiD1- lug, and autumn coming, and must be not still at taart. be true to her, Shigeo he had given uo sign, nor sent toir letter back. ? Slut used to look daily at the ring that, be had given her, daily, and almost hourly some- times. She did not, of course, 'be- lieve that when he forgot her it would change its color, and yet each deer. when she mew its hue unchang- ed, she almost knew that she was comforted. with an utterly irrational and childish comfort. "In another year I shall almost enow." she said to herself On her twentieth birteday. Ilow theso ven- ter days recalled the time of lerenles brief stay -the winter days, the leaf- less trees, the frozen roads ewer which she had First heard les .5ter. She lived again through each remem- bered meeting with Min. -forgetting the anniversary of no cla.y or hour. It wise in tho middle of January that he had come. 44nd la little Mere team three weeks he had gone away. One afternoon tette, found icer stooping, over the Oren drawing-; out window, and gathering eiceletsi end the girl started and Calered wizen her mother came suddenly and spolce to her. "Be said be would keep the violets I gave him, and look at, them today. Has be ree mendiered, 1 wonder t" else bad been thinking to hermit, "Seven months t • she said, when July came. "Seven enontess front to -day." she thought one usonsing several hours afterwards -before she believing that be was first with her told him. She passed those hours when he wee not first ? Au un - alone in her own room. 'xi th out salable bitteruess owl sadness courage to go to the Andy where she took, possession of him. It seemed to 'mew he was waiting for hew Ile bine that he bad trusted her, and would call her presently, she knew, she had deeeived Wm, It the agony and in her cowareice andanguish of hie sudden loneiniese he could sot she waited until he called her ; but judge her petty, nor believe that be Was a long time -it Wan, past woe etill dear to het t bemuse she pRonr tig mas. weave 0,00ek before she heard bis had let a. strauger's bow outweigh voice at the foot or the staira at Ids pessiouate love of thieney years, One orinet lame to. make swine a last. There Was the open book upon ids Profitable farm product unless he She Answered to his summons, then, desk on which half an bour agar he gees Permanently into the busince;s, bad Wee marking tame paeeages for Teo teeny who try to umee money her to copy,, and suddenly lie elosed front swine end it ueprollaetie one it and threw it on oue eide. She ewer, And Omelets it. or Itemeese Ate would never do wet* egain for hiee„ ter two years of fair success the he said. Already it felt to hint as third season proves 0114-lattlactary,, and went down to isioli whlte, and with, her knees trendelog. "I thought you bad gone out, my dear," he quietly said, as s.he en- tered the room, "Cau you come me for A little wbile now? wane you to copy these passages." And he would have begun. to show them to her, but suddenly, with strange, paesionote movement, she put her arin close about his neck. "Yes -presently -I will do it pree sently-but 1 have twee wanting to come to you -I Item been waiting alt the morning to tell you some- thing.'" ehe said-"aud 1 don't know how to do it Oh, way dear. Yea rause forgive um t" she cried ail at. once, and dropped down on her knees beside blue and hid her head, sobbing. Tome his breast. "Doreaahwhat in re we he espied, ie. a etartied VOir.4. Ile tried to lift p her two and look at her. "My daritng, sae. How cottle eon he afraid to tell me aoyteiug ? Speids quietly, ?awl let mo know what le troubling you," he geld, in a sooth- ing voice. She tried to telt him, but in her sorrow for him she waft cuing too bittet'ty for a time for tbo verde come. Only by degree% in n sue It was o. Pleasant SUUnner dor. end the summer and Use sunshine had been giving ber uew heart of late. She was rambling about tee garden thee morning, after breakfast., singing a, little to herself. One% as Frank heti eropheeled elm would do, else used to go to the garden -gate. and wait for the pose:rum there to take the letters from him, lest I er-• hap» Mere might be that one for her that should decide her fate. To -day site went and waited for him, and when he Conn) he brought a, letter to her -but it was not a letter from Frank. The writing of the address was strange to ber. She took it, aud looked at it for a moment or two-ruealed-a little stunted. "Who Can it be from ?" she thought. She opened the envelope -she herd- ly knew why -with a certain sense of expectation and alarm. The note that. she found inside wits only a short one, written in a, woman's band that seemed to have trembled It little as It wrote. "Dorcas Trelawney," it began abruptly, "1 have been very ill, abd I have no daughter to talce care of me. My son will have me believe that, it I ask you, you will come and ,stay with me for a little while. Is Ps To prove: to you that Dr. I e Chases Ointment la a certain and absolute cure for cacti S and ovary form ot itching, bleedlnitandarWudtogpliat, the nainfaattwars bava kuaisoito IL Sae tea. tlntoniab. in tha daily areas and ask your:wish. what thoy think of it. You can uso it and tetra= missy back If not oared. 60o a box, at all dealer. or Bosistisomitagas .Sc ConTorobto, Dra Chase's Ointtrient he right, and will you come ? If you consent shall be glad, as the future will, at any rate, settle itself better from. our learning to know each other. Prank leaves me in two or three days, and should you coins) you evill find me alone. Let me have an answer. If you write that may expect you, you shall hear from me again." And then there wits' added merely the bare signature --"Prances Harcourt." Dorcas felt as, if she was in a dream for a little while, as she stood with this strange letter in her hand. She was not glad, she was not sorry ; she only, for the first few minutes, stood. looking at the words with no other feeling but be- wilderment. And then, suddenly, tee arrested flood of life rushed back upon her, and she flushed crimson, and began to tremble, body and spirit, with an irresistible, passion- ate mingling of joy and pain. Her Pra.nk !-her Prank who hed not forgotten her 1 -that was her wild great cry of gladness ; but another cry almost as greats came with it. Flow was she to show this letter to her father, and tell him the thing that would take the joy out of his life? It. was. a. long time afterwards- broken, alnioet untufelligible 05 sen- dW they mete at loet-till tee story was told, and hift blanhe ene suspicious) rated elOwly took in the "St was going from Min; be had lost her -the one love of all Ida liM. As some drowning ereature see- tpg death before hien xnetht look ba cee for the last thee on the world passing euddenly beyond his reach, so, when compreheiliiien Canis, did it Srelit to her teat he Molted feta her ems. She remembere4 that pethette gaze -despair, reproach, tee agouy a great, louellneee all mingled in ite- for yeare after her OWit pain in all the rest bad peesed away. The greatest thIngs come too swiftly soineternee: we rife and lleltele' olney to go about our daily bust - while perhape the angel oi death or separation tree his sword already drawn to Smite us. TO Mr, Trelawney the blow that took the best thhig from his life eame truly as a thief comae in the night, steal- ing from him, without warning, at one street% the hope and gladness of twenty years. Sho was kneeling still beside hisa tboy had not meld Melt to One an- other. He bad read her letter : elhe had told her story to him ; he had only asled her ono or two question% There had been that ono look of hopelees tinguMh : but after that »ot any groat sign of culotte*. As she knelt sobbing. Presently he put his band upon bee hair, and began to strokes it. "Hush, hush, my dear t" lia Said to her, as if sea bad been a Child. "You me, we haVe bet% a great deal IA one another, it has mine sharply." he seed, aftsr a little while, in a low voice. "I think that possibly, if you lind warned ine. Doreas-but perhaps not, my dear - perhaps not, he added, . "And so you want to go to bins?" bo said, wietfully, after another silence, "Dorecue are yon sure ? You scarcely 'know him, Ito seemed to ine-well, a boyish kind of feliow; no harm in elm, eerhaps, but" - with his lip quivering -"too slight and immature, 1 should 'ham thought. My child, Will he satisfy you 9" he broke Out, almost with a cry. "I cannot think it u I cannot think it I" He made her lift bee face, and put his hand upon hor forehead to hold it back. that he might look at her. "Only a boy -no student : think of that -a mere light-hearted, shal- low boy I" he reiterated, bitterly. "He is not shallow," she answered, in a low, quick voice. "Well, at any rate, a mere boy -a boy in mind -and you have been used to men." "You are not just to him; he is a man too," she said. "I cannot see it ; I think you are under a delusion. I cannot ender - stand it," he said, piteously. "Proud, worldly people, too, 'who will look down open you. Dorcas, how can you bear to go to them when they do not want you ?" "Prank wants xne," she said, with a half break in her yoke, and yet in a tone that was like e little cry of Joy. • Yes, this was the whole; a strang- er wanted her, and where he called her she must go. With a strange anguish, as of ice gathering about his heart, he began to feel how he had built up the gladness of his life like a house without foundations, grounding it on the sand when he thought it had been grounded on a rock. How long nad he been living V.........sranwarogotwara. And Now Claims That the Best Thing in the World for is Dr. Chase's Ointment. The doctors are wrong. They usually claim that an operation, with all its risk, pain, and expense, is the ortly cure for piles. We can prove by the statements of thousands of good, honest men and women as that Dr. Che's Ointment, not only promptly relieves the suffering from piles, but also positively cures this dreadful ailment. It frequently mires after the knife as hfailed. Mr. J. P. Miller, who is einplosted as cooper by the Kennedy and Davis Milling Co., Lindsay, Ont., states : ---"I believe that Dr. Chase's Ointment is the best thing in the world for piles. say this, because it has positively and thoroughly mired me of ite,hing, bleeding piles, nod this after all other remedies I could procure had failed. I eaa recommmid this ointment to anyone suffering- from piles, kilowine that it will certainly Cure." Mr. V. Mann, machinistanL , with the Cadian ocm ootive Works, and who lives at 24 Dufferin street, Kingston, states:-e'Dr. Cha,se's Ointment is, I believe, the most effective treatnici, r piles that is to be obtained. have used it and it cured me of bleecliog piles of a most aggravated m. Only suffer- ers from piles can understand what I went through. 'rhe misery caused by them was something- awful, and I don't believe I could endure the same torture again. At nights especially 1 naffered dreadfully, and could not get rest or sleep. I found a positive cure in Pr. Chase',s Ointment, and gladly recommend it to others.'' There is no disputing the merit of Dr. Chase's Ointment and its (nrectiveness as a c..in,c tor itching. bleeding, and protruding piles. In nearly,- every community are to be found people who has,e been Clired of this, wretched 'disease by Dr. Chase's Ointment, It is for sale by nearly all dentlers, at CO cents, a boae pr will be sent postetaid oa receipt of price by Edmanson, Dates and Co., Toronto..., if the life of all these previous years th.GY CQue11414) that the best 4ele's the life, es -en of ysstessay-had bee for the businese hiteet pessedi and come an old thing, far away. As he they try- their easel at, something, sat silent in his chair it seemed to else. e.s a contieueus busbies.% fade back from him like a dream, carried onoot one or ewe or three andl“Lcru °IeeTioreeIQnelYYe3;::4tnt4euau4tienty eliialeser Y:tit io:Supeiior, ate Bcontinud.) mw0iiisueittus1lget. 0,La) rousiocrm soucor-r nous. They've let the sehoomenee, (hurley. where yore ago we eat And eliot our paper bullets at the Man. tees time -worn bat; TIM book le gone on weigh it hung, and the master sleepth now Where -schoolboy tricke eats never east sbadow o'er hie brow. 'They've built a Pelt', inmeeteg one-ehe rifle et all the town, Aud laughing Inds anti lasses go ite brawl steps up am/ dowu; g for a einitsnuoue nicluetry, Cara More readily then in wInter, be. termed a rational way. No Mew mer can aeord to drive the machine ere a utak Production in his etaWS so fast that in a fQW years the Ma. chine is worn out. This, of courses is done by excessive erein feeding. The city milk man may afford tO do tide, but the fanner -cannot. Hie cow should be good for ten, years, of free preelection in the dairy every time burring accident or disease. TO elhIeee Road rAy. Tbe summer seams's, is the tine Make pigs 14:y. They then Matt no protection agebest cold, are not, strafed in growth, ard demand but ilttle attention. Grima is the cheapest and beet food for pigs, amid they will thrive and grow upon mach diet, as gra:7S rout:dna an abundatice of mineral matte, which promotes the growth of boue. Grain is db.' neient in limewhich is esseneial for the growth of all young stock, his sore reward. Each eucemiling Clover contains more than twenty year we learn More aboz4 the work. k times as much 'IMO as corn. To and ihal out where we make tnis-e feed corn to pigs in eununer is to tales, rind where we could bare eepply them with a, kind of food made improvements. We become so winch they do not retie -lire, as familiar with the wbole subject that growth at this season is more to be we am competent tudges as to wise- deeireel than fat. Them wile mahe ther we should raise this or that a preset from hogs depend largely breed. We also grove accustomed to upon the pasture, freedont and the antielpeting tee mzu kets. which. is Privilege of selecting Yariet,Y Of greAt deal ies these (Mee of ituctu- the pigs end wanting of deseam. tions. Then, too, we learn how est to feed the ettimals-how to get CARE OF MANURE. Most from every ton at feed, GRASS OR HAY. It Oita is vie; into swine in Peri* the warm mason, when the farmer is too busy with his ensile to rere for the snanere beep, lone an - .4. tower crania', itS Waned With a IMAS, ran oen won, afford to stat (god Rains wash away ups tidiest pm*, resounding lolls. , _ewith the best bred animate he eau tions of the sr:assure if it is exposed Thet youthful ears, M dittent boom neeedi and hy the intelligent system while tile Summer heat may cause of seleetion send brmilloghe will in :remit lermentation and the rain:Igen tirao grade up his finelt to a, stand'.leseae In the form of aOltn011ia• Vie ard of excellence which his. neighbor ;proper course to pursue Is to lieep cannot equal except at great cost, ' all the massurts under slieller tand Went a man starts in nisei year or have the bedding or other almorbeat ' stones be an the floor; two to pureliam low Weeds ond 1 mattsriale in a fine condition in °e- 1, alone, of all the Wye, who rimmed bihtearod swine. it is a costly awl. duelled here, ex- ,der that the liquid porticoes may be perienee. and he hardly reaps much absorbed. Should beat occur force Itemain to See it battered up aye left award from It, There in quite a Pa crowbar into the heap ea several so Ione aud dror. diaereuce, however. when be derilie I plaece and pour cold water into the erately adds earls ,yeer a littic3 new 'manure. The cloeer the rainure ie le tinting on the Mine old bench NOWA blood to hiti Stork. Mere:46411g the Itiovied, and the air excluded from we eat side by side 'quelity its well as the (M41414', The the fieterioa the leite !Micelles, of the Ansi carved our names open tlie deal, outlay la thus STUMM each eeeson for 'Founesure becoming overbeated. elite when not by ranter eyed; pure-bred iodinate, and the retunes. ewe teen the piscaltry Melee elioted Slue* then a dozers boa have sought correspondingly good, their greet Alit to &play, leiliewlee in regard to food. it re- ,,•1;tectlii41.!,"%let ItIthtliYe14'ItIneidde14'Itilete elstt,niadelet 1 Aud, like the Motprints an tee Sands quires a pulley of continuous farms,' and Lope it, on as Nino asi Is possis our mace Imo passed aevays big along Certain lime eelealeht, _win : tole ees it elves the teat necatte Nelsen .enable OW to laalt years aiseaso she it is teem,. The, sehtgaietieu thet it 'levee here we learned to conjugate gragi. forege .111(1 grain creeks that. te meet to plieushass geispo Os ,orroit- ] "amo, emes„ mats" Can be p lanued for sn intelligent ro•e Bosse, as guano is produeed by bleb While glances from the 1055e3 made mate tation system will all iselp toward , that sNist anisssi inshust food. merle he irt go pit-aspat; the same general end, The cost- of the eatiseeee fowls euheistmeetly ']was here we tell in love, yen lino% feeding Will titiO5 OP to n certain upon aria.. , IL 14 Weldable tO with girls who loeked us:,;fogeGiondt plasesteutlevadaletyidsreedstile.:4,1410elnielulintillitee',wethev; „thloasuldtilyesionlietat;iitlelge inveeri.tilotusli througis- You with her piereleg eyes of hlaeke referee of 111RIP. Lend mute Aril and Inn the Kora% and mine with Iwo of Muse . fertile for eons and grain, through; ' a rotation or crops, anal hay ana fore i, Our sweethearts -pretty ghee were ego crops prepared ullead of time . UNDIelt PliltStelliele. they -to us how very dear- ,1 for eat% winter. In the course oft,. „tier_ 6.0.th.... _____. __.e.., Bow down your head with me, my bevel time the work beet:sums almost awe, n,gp.e.g.t..1 he Leumit4lintirtiit st and shed tor them a tear, toniatic. and tho 'wine produce time,. A" i ting-roorn two losers later than lie - With them the earthly seluicie out; fit.0 on the average front Year ta nal. car i OVC y Inn ( now 8 An S iney hear its musics swell. I'm flitting in the old ane, with ite tattered, hitheeleee deer; The windows are all broken, Med the 1 atands e r that Initst prom) sa s actoty. Before the Pao Great Master, in the "house not made with hands." You tell ,me you are far out West; a COMMON SENSE IN FEEDING. AU kinds of Vows. including duel l purpose eows, to produce the hest, awyer, deep in laws, With Joe. who sat bellied us here, and retumus rns t needs he led on what tickled us with straws; may be termed common sense prin. may wealth come at your touch; But wile your long strong legal straws :Ovielldstet/olattourihr elnIthIstvAtwfielleeabet don't tickle men too MUCh. MI, any lack of .flesh below what Dere, to the right, sat Jimmy hones- conduces to the mune end is more Ife's Uniting now, :and plIniShing, AS WaSteful, since It increa.seS so much you must remember Jim- matiter punished elm; :relatively tee food of maintenanee. Wbat an unlucky Ind be was! his sky 4 As a rule the great mistake in the was dark with woes; -average herd lies In 'evolving the aide got he blows. . In the second place, they must be !fed ou foods to the greatest exteet young and old, too low fiesbed. Whoever did 'the sinning it WAS JIM Who M'ats ; possible produced (11.: the farm, gi e - life s esti were going down, en in due balance, approximately as their constituents. acid grown and Those days are all gone by, my bop; to the sehoelhoy brown; , handled in a Way that Will involve the least possible labor on the part With here and there a silver hair amid of man that Will adequately secure the desired cud. In other words, these foods will as far as pra.ctica- ble, be grown in mixturee, the threshiug and grinding being done alibyAinItlihtirtels will be liberally led; they ler the third place. while the will also be fed grain in what inity eiples. In the first place, they must Look out for rennber one, my boys; bo well tee. memo emasii ea ease But memory on never die, so we'll talk o'er the joys We sharesi together, in this house, when you and I were boys. Though ruthless hands may tear it down -this old house lone istui drear, They'll not destroy the characters that started out from here; Time's angry waves may sweep the shore and wash out all beside; Bright as the stars that shine above, they shall for aye abide. I've seen the 11CW house, Charley; 'tie the pride of all the town, And laughing lads and lasses go its broae stela up and down; But you or I, my dear old friend, can't love it half as well As this condemned, forsaken one with cracked and tongueless lied. CHILDHOOD MEAIORIES, As I wandered, sedly dreaming Of the happydays of yore, Strains of music 'floated toward me, Sweetest ever heard before. They were wafted down the valley In the gentle summer breeze, They filled the air with melody, Lingering softly 'Mang the trees.' Drawing near a vine -clad arbor, A band of children 'spied, Singing of the walls of jasper And ate. lIoine Beyond the Tide." ln their midst a lovely' maiden, With a face so pure and. briget, Joined the happy throng in singing, Of a world that knows no niget. Oh, tender memories of childhood, Father, mother, sister, dear, When at will we roamed the wild wood, With -neer a thought of care or fear. And with voices soft and clear, Came the sweet -words "God is call- ing," ' Earth's pleasures shall I still hold dear! Sing on, glad and happy children, Cheering hearts with grief oppress- cd - Sing of the dear loved ones waiting fn the "homeland" of the blest. There our sad dreams will be over; The "K.ing in his beauty" we'll see; 'Way beyond life's turbid river, Over by the cryStal sea. lies•n to n. lecelare: bitil ft . ticket offered to me quite unexpect- edly thin afternoon. ned didn't l'ilco to toles the ebanee." "Very statues: I know you 111unt have a little 040Sn:twat, What atim "'Ole about the atuumphere Would you believe it? The leeturer Nay:re-' that athisespheric air is eo Messy that its weight upon the body is 15 potinds to thw Ilia swam* iii'*. Think of Gude" "Wonderfult" eXelainted his Wife, "It. Is oleo to hiloW fart:. like that: they explain other things, den's they?" "Of course." :aid Diggs. comeliest- lating hbreelf on having escaped so "Now I understand, Jetties, why you find it So hard to get up in the morning. rqd the lecturer eeplain how to remote the preesure?" Diggs has come to the fond:mum that he must be eareful„ or his wife may resort to sorne other pressure to counteract, the ellen. of the weight of tlte atmosphere in the' curly morning. The leverage depth of the new Texas all wells is idle feet. The oil rises 00 feet to 100 Met above the surface. SUMMER, Ide-Intleed, there's jolly goo(l fishing lbout here. Miss Swift msrle a great Catch 'when she wes hero last summer. She -Yes, that old roan ,,,;ts wort h at least 11 million.