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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1907-06-06, Page 3U c c) 04.0.040+9♦O-erUefoes tits failure to nee peas the absserlce DARE H13? OR, A SAD LIFE STORY ♦41.0+04 09 0+0 ♦ 0-+ O+O+ i♦O O+O+O+O+O+-O♦O•4-O+O+'o ♦G♦ (.II.\1'i111 \\\II. ie of the reasons, though not the r I„ "r even the main one. of Burgoyne's visit to Algiers is that the Wilson fain- tly ere wintering there. And yet he dreads filo steeling edit then) inexpre s- bibly. When they list parteddl- ukly after having stood together reeund Amelia:s open grave. they had all been at a high-pressure of mot i•in. and of demi ins! rat ive a ((teemed enc.'s, \vhfch umlhing in their tastes, habits or na- tur.•s, could possibly make. continuous. Ile tui. a horrible fear that they will ex - elect to take up t..eir relations at the name Ixiint at \\ bleb he had left them. 11., would du it if he could, but he feels that it is alesolutely impossible to ;lin. the door of that ream in his memory \\'hick Ls labelled "Amelia" is forever locked. It is only in deepest silence and solitude that- he permits himself now and again to turn the hey and sparely and painfully look in. How will ho bear it if Ilu'y insist on throwing the portals ‘wide. dragging its disused furniture to lh•• light, rummaging in its corners'' lie sleeps ill on This, his first night of .\irica ; and even when at length he .urceeds in losing importunate con- ci"asness, he is teased by absurd yet peiuful dreams, in which Amelia and Elizabeth jostle each other impossibly with jumbled p ereinalities and changed attributes. E. tra\agant ns 'his visions are. they have yet such a solid vividness Vial, tit his first waking, ite feels a strange sense of unsur'ness as to which of the two women that have beset his pillow is Iho dead, and which the living one? In dreams, how often our last onus, and those whom we still possess, take hands together on equal terms 1•:\en when he is wide nwake, nay. more, dressed and breakfasted. that feeling of uncertainly, that something akin to the "Black misgivings of a creature, Moving about in worlds not realized," remains strong enough to drive him once again lo the list of visitors in the entrance 111111 in order to assure himself that his bruin has not been the dupe of his eye. M. Cipriani has been as good as his word. The corrected list, promised over night. has replaced the incomplete one, and 1IIIm st the first navies that Jim's eye alights 113)011 are those of "Mr., Mrs. and Miss Le Marchant, England." His own mune immediately follows, and he eke_ takes as a gond a\gt.ry what is merely an 'evident due to the fact of his room and theirs being on one floor. Elizabeth k. beyond question. beneath the sante roof as himself ; nay. even now she luny probably be sunning herself like a awhile pigeon on that terrace, whose rel tiles he seas shining in the morning sun through an open side -door. The thought is 110 sooner 14111el than 111. follows whither it leads him ; but she is not on the terrace; and though a moment ago his nerves were tingling at 11144 Thought of speech with her. yet 1►e Is conscious of n feeling of relief that their meeting is, for the moment, deferred. What can he say lo her? What can she say to him? Ile stands looking down on the green Rea of richly -clothed dark Ines beneath hien—ilex and eucalyptus. and all the umflmIlinr venture of the soft South. From the fiercely -blazing rel purple of a ilu"gainvillia, so unlike 11►e pale, cokl bine blos•,)m, Io Much in our conserva- tories we give that Hanle, his eye travels over tree -top; and snowy villas. each summer palace mid thinly mosque, to the curving bay. round \w11101 the Atlas Mountains are gently Inying their arms; and (:ape \talefou, with the haze of day's young prime about it. is running Out into the Medilerra1101111. 11e Is alone al first. but presently Other people 011111e forth : the '.'tI 1(41 udi- flfl 111) 11. for once delivered feint his fostering willow, sits dawn \\ illi a pile of English n0\wspn .'r -i to enjoy himself let the .un. which does riot yet rite so high as to be atm-str,key. Jim's last mows ncighl.e.r in the rel skirl comes out loo, helmeted and praayer-ixx,ked. she Is going to ehmrh ; -se, is he: but the d.x:r not fell her s". for fear she should offer lo) accompany him. She .leer\ er to hit» Ilial the climate it a f' .. 1 . that the is the lirsl day for three \'' • .- \%Melt -11,' t= 1141,' I" go alit w terms lens eti 1u l )umbrella. "ssi. are net so green fi,T n"lhing, 1 Can tell you, .says ,Ire. with a laugh. and n rather resentful glance nl the �p tended \velure ;worded her, and so I• him. II 140.1, 1: 1 have said. is piing Io e It. 11nd rs presently asking 1114 way 1,, tli' I:ngh-I atnpx'I, The \\ikon Innen will certainly be (here. and i1 has sire .1: hum 111111 the , dreaded meeting \\ill Ir Iolihed of half its painful week- eart ne.. if it lakes pines' i1) public. At n utilise!' p,.rete crowded allh issuing t• ',,:e'gnlieur, SybiOs entered fall Into 3) '.•i '- it is true That `yhllla never albet i ne service --nor can (.'• iha 1111 -OW her antes atr.ul his '.,9:. 3bit \ilr:ileir' means he 1111\ lake I . lessen the iter elifene and s?, li I of that exptelcd encounter. the thought of it sits like lead upon his spirits, as he ‘walks quickly—it- is difficult to descent s143%t'ly .u, sleep a hill—down the preeipI- lous lanae, which is 111e only mode of approach for man 01. laboring beast to th r high -perched hotel he ha. chosen. But he in young, and presently the cheer- ful. clear loveliness of the day and the sight of Nuture's superb 'Igor work their natural effect upon 111111. it "'lust, in.e•evl. ho an inveterate grief that re- fuses to be soothed by the intluenct, of this grt.en Eden. What a generosity of vegetation. as evidenced by lite enurmone garlands of great -reeved i%y, waving from tree to tree as for some perpetual fele! :long the high hill brink That skirt, this sleep by -road, eucalyptus rear their lofty heads and !heir faintly -.scented blos- soms; (duo draws her potent sword, and 1111d:41e: ied prickly pear displays 11et• chess th malignity. Beneath, whet a lush undergrowth of riotous great - foliaged plants—acanthus, and a hun- dred other green sisters, all flourishing and waxing, so unstinted, so at large! Ile has mashed the main road—the shady road that leads by a seven -mile descent from ?Mustapha Superieur to the town. How shady it is! Popper -trees hang their gI-oen lialr, so thick and fine. over it! anti ilexes hold the Veatch of their little dark green leaves. Past the Gov- ernor's summer palace. with its snowy dome and Moorish arcades gleaming through its iron gates. From a villa garden a flowering shrub sends a mixed perfume of sweet and bitter, as of honey and hops. from its long yellow flower - tassel; to his pleased nostrils. At a sharp turn, where the hill fall, away more precipitously than before, the base the nob, the shipping, the dazzling little oily, burst upon hila—tile little cily swanning up her hill, from where the French town bathos its feet in the azure ripples, to where the Arab town loses the peak of its triangle, in the Casbah and the fort of the now exe- crated Emperor. Blinding white, ardent blue, profound green—what a pleasant picture for a summer Suray morning! And how gay the woad is too. as the East and the west step slung it Ingether ! item is a hem tearing 'see ► the steep incline with Ove poor 11)11.' thin louses abreact. 11 is full of English cluu•ch- goers, and yet, oh mommy I standing up in the vulgnresl of modern vehicles, With las slight dark lands grasping the transit, is a hill Arab, draped with the grave greet. of the Vatican Demos- thenes. But alas! alas! even Capon hiI1I the West has lad its claw, for as the Iran) ru,he. pa,l. Jim's shocked eyes aline that 11e, %%Iso 111 011101' respects t•.ighl have fed the !kirks of Lakin 111 Paden-fir/um wears on his feet a pair of ole! elastic -sided boots. Here come chattering a couple of smart Chasse,rs d'. frique, in blue and real, fe.11owel by n woman dressed as Bache' was at the patsy well—so dress- ed, that is to say, as to her while shrouded upper woman, for, indeed, there is to reason for supposing Ihnl Rachel wore a pair of Bob Roy- tartan trousers! fast the Plateau Saultere, pherein the lirriin-roofed !avoir French- women are sousing their linen in water that --ole, hideous thought !—Is changed Leet Once a week ; along an ugly su- burb, and past a little wood ; through the arch in the forliticntiens, the Porte d'Isly. till at length the i.plscopal cha- pel—why are the Protestant pease: of worship v'nllered over the hahitnhle globe everywhere so frightful ?—stands before luau, Ile had thought himself in good lion, but he must have 10il0rrd more num 110 had been aware of. ns the !,ell 1s MINA end the pore!' closed. Ile enters ns quietly as runs' be. and lakes his place near the deur. The building strikes damp and chilly dospile the warming presence of the whole English colony, ermined out of the four hole) .ncred M Anglo- Saxons, and out of runny an ilex-stld(l, orange -graved eaunpnign !)eside.s. The buildheg is quite full, whielh is. no doubt Iho reason wiry Jim fails to catch any glimpse of the Wilson family throughout the service. Ile ha- plenty of lime lo In- terrogate with his eye• the nurnerorus rows of backs Telnet hint. ns the sermon is long. Jima had known (lint it would be s•) from the moment when the clergyman entered the pulpit with an open fume— l" written sermon --in he hand The sound ed a brogue piercing Ihmugh, even through the giving out of the text, soon puts hen in possesses 01 lf.e fur- ther fact that lie is in the clutches. and at the 'nervy, of an entirely umehicaleil yet curiously Il»1'nl Irishman. Is Elisabeth \e Tilling under the inflic- tion he,? \ecru. 111 the Mont days, was she very pnt•'nt under prolonged pulpit eloquence. ile can see her with his memory's eye not very cowerfI% reading her hs inn -honk --can hear tier (101 lap- ping. Seieral people round hits now nr'. not very mwerlly, reading their ta\niii-Look,, but she es not nnaor►g ft11ue. 11•' 11115 no inure sight of her than Ire has of £,''i!in ; hal in neither ca) -e such are the disndvaullages of his position --- Rickets. Simply the visible sign that baby's tiny bones are not forming rapidly enough. Lack of nourishment is the cause. Scott's Emulsion nourishes baby's entire system. Stimulates and makes bone. Exactly what baby needs. AU. DRUG .IsTs see. AND f1 00 of the object he seeks. Ile is olte of the tit Nuevo to be out of the church elite at length set free. raid stands just outside the pot' -h while Mu long stream el a\urshtppers defiles before 111111. It takers +cru) lime to empty itself into the suis tt ne. and nearly as long before the catches sight of any member of either of the families he cs on the lookout for. Of the I.e \larchants, indeed. he never catches sight, for the excellent reason that they are not to bo caught sight of, not being there. In the case of the Wil - sons he is more fortunate, thought here. loo, a sort of surprise Ls in store for him. Ile has involuntarily bonen scan- ning. in his search for them. only those of the cengregulion who are dressed in mourning. 'FI,e .lieluro Ileal the retina of 11is eye has kept of Cecilia is of one Lear -swollen and erapisswaddled ; and though, if he had thought of it, his rea- son would 3)446',' told 111111 that, after seven months, she is probably no longer sobbing 01141 sallied, yet even then tho impression ihat he weak, expect to re- ceive from her would be u grave and a black one. This is why, (although lie is on the lookout for her, yet s11e,comes upon his) at list as a surprise. "Jim 1" crie. a .nice, pitched a good deal higher than is wont to make itself heard within the precincts of u diureti— c' female voice of delighted surprise and cheerful welcome; "father, here is Jim !" Burgoyne lura,, and sees a lady in very smart bonnet, full of spring floe Drs, and with a led en tout cas—for the have now issued into .the days paten beam—shading her rosy face; a lad wlloso appearance presents about a wide a contrast to the serious and ink figure ho land expected to see as it is vel possible to imagine. Cecilia. indeed, is leeking. what he maid admiringly pionouuced her befor sending her font; to triumph, "ver drossy," Mr. Wilson is black, certain' — but, then, clergymen always aro blue —and he still has 11 band 1.1x)11 his hat but it is a very narrow one—sotto%% nearing its vanishing peful. in answc to his daughter'. joyous apostrophe, 11 answers : "Ste Cecilia! do nut talk s loud. I low ore you, Jim?" And the meeting is over—.that firs meeting which Jim had shrunk Eton with such inexpressible eppro liension In.. certain to be fraught with iutolerabl emotion ; with calls upon hits that h would not be able Io answer; with hear ing of incurable wounds. 'fhe contras with the reality' is so stat lliug that a first it maker 1►in) n)Cal dizzy. ;)1 the showy creature beside Lint. -preening herself under her gay -umshade, bo Iho sante overwhelmed, .trrl,uk, tear - drenched Cecilia. whorl at their last meeting he had ((defect in do solemn an embrace? Iter cheerful voice tuswers Inc herself : "It is so nice to ace you again 1 \\'hen did you mine? \\'e did not expect you quite so soon ; in your last letter you were rather vague as to dales; 1 can't say that you shine as a correspondent, Tofu \will cone back to luneh,s,n estins, of COMM'. will not you? dejeuller, as they call it here: I always though) dojeuner meant breakfast. Von Willcone, 18111 3111 poll? ?ybillu will b e .so glad to see you—glad, That is to say, in her dismal way." she nds with n laugh. %which he listen; to in silence that is almost .funned, The sound of her voice, though set to so different a lune from what he had anti- cipated. las l.roughl hack tl)0 past with such asb nisl.ing 6'iwidness to hint; her very' I1e•er :at Sybilla seems so) much a part of the old life Ihnl he half horns' his head. expoeting once more to see Atneliu:s deprecating face, to hear her peace -making voice put in a plea. ns it has done so many hundred liners, for the peevish mantle imagimaire. They leave been strolling towards the carriages wailing outside, and lime now reached one, driven by an indigene, n M,.or. dusky' as Othello. elitism) as Ithadnnwnlhus, and with his serious charms set off by a striped )slyer and white Jacket and a red 5(1811. "Is not he beautiful?" asks Cecilia.wi111 another laugh, alluding to her eooctman, as she and 1iitrgoyee set off upon their tele -a -tete drive, \h'. \Wilson seeing, apparently, no reason in the fact of his (tfurga.yne's) appearance on the scene for departing (rem his invariable custom of walking home from church; "i3 net he benulifiil ? when first we came herr, we were In mor,rning ; ns if " --ooh-hing herself with a stilled sigh -- "cher' \ons any need Io tell you Ihnt; and father wailed to put hits into black. lei! 1 would not hear of II tens not I right ? Ile would have been nothing in block ; it is his red and yellow that give hire his cachet," Jim feels inclined to buret out laugh- ing. There is something so ludicrous in the disproportion 1s'hveen his fears and their fullibneil, iu Ihr. fact of 111.' whole i"'ap«''(once of ,\melia's death resolving itself into n sash or no sash for an Arab a,uchman, thiol Ile has some difficulty in answering in a key of which the irony shall not he too patent : "1 111ink Yon were perfectly right." Ile does not krn,ew \\tether she per- ceives the dryne-. el his lone; he Thinks probably not, es she goes 011 to ask hien a great manyquestions cis 10 Jo ur- ney. etc.. talking gt.i••kI) and rather Oiglilily, scared)* having room between 1►et queries for his me.1105)1ltleic replies. and ending with'I110 epieulalion "110\6' nice it 14 111 ,'e' you again !" "Thank you." Ilis acknowledgment seems to himself so curt that, after a moment he feels constrained to add sontelhing to it. That something is the )bold and trivial inquiry : "And you— thew have yeti all leen gelling ono" teethe shrugs her shoulders. "\\•e are letter off than wo were; you knew them, 01 roux -e. Nobody ever thought that fathers brother would have died before him. \\'nit lilt you see our Villa—it is one of the show ones here; and, of course it is very pleasant hating more money ; but one cannot help wish- ing that it 1184 come earlier." She sighs as she speaks : not an ostentatious sigh, bel a repressed and strangled one; and despite the flower -garden in leer bonnet. his heart softens to her. Per- haps his kink has rested on that tbwer- garden with a snore open disapprobation than he knows. for she says presently : "1 think that ono may be very bright - •'elms') outside and very black inside. ('tither snit 1 are sometimes very black "1r you?" "\\e do very well when we nr'' a;.ena together, father and I; wo like to talk about her. Deer ale I what a place M- giers is for dust ! that is why !hero are se many blind people here. flow it gets into one's eyes!" She puts her hand' kerchief up hastily to her face as she speaks; but Jim is not take"' in by the pour little ruse, urtd he listens 1., her 111 a silence that is almost lender, as she goes on : "Sybilla begins to cry it we even distantly allude to her; yet 1 knew"-- with exasperation --"that .h.' talks of her by the hour 10 stranger., to her new doctor, for instance; yes, she has picked up a new doctor herr'--g dreadful little adventurer f She will probably talk of nothing else but her to y'011." "God forbid!" (I'u be conlineed). A WATERY 11 REL. (By a Banker). One of the strangest spectacles to he seen in Europe is perhaps the great public bath of Leukerbitd in Switzer - kind. The visitor proceeding from Kandersleg walks or rides along a mountain path. environed on all sides by Nature:: glories; at first along the banks of a foaming torrent eddying and swirling past jutting rocks; now leap- ing over a nature -hewn escarpment 'n - to a seething whirlpool below, now torn into surf l,y un irregular mass of brok- en rock. dislodged from above, or now for u time calmly and placidly flowing (.n. `till ascending. the path leads, through a Paradise of wild flower's, en- der the shoulder of the masslve Balm- horn—and those who have ascended to Hie sllnlmit of this snowy peak say that the panorama visible thence is magni- ilcenl and sublime—past the stores 1.f a mountain lake and on to the foot cf the beautiful Gemini pass. And now the lover of nature, is re- velling in her grandeur and 'in her glories. On one side shut in by a chain (•f towering monarchs of the snows, their lofty upreared peaks bedecked with fleecy wisps of silvery vapor, the mighty \Yelsshorn reigning supreme over them al!, on (he other the outspread winding valley of the Rhone, the river glittering like a silver thread. and. at a giddy (icpth far beneath. the little village ..1 Leukerhad. Arriving al length al this romantic nalure-adorned spot the visi- tor proceeds to the Baths. And here a strange spectacle meets his view. '1'110 principal bath, a large covered in sheet 1 alkaline or sulphurous water healed 1 3'nature to a genual warmth. is a very Babel of tongues; for here are congre- gated a large crowd of men and wo- men of many nationalities garbed in tong flannel robes who spend several hours simmering in the water. each t•alher having before him or her a float- ing table or reading desk; some reading novels, some sipping coffee, some talk - Ing and trying to laugh. But as the majority are suffering from some skin ailment the spectacle is unsnvory and nauseous, and the visitor is glad 'n escape from the steamy iniasmilic at- mosphere into the free mountain ah'. And If he be wise he will at once pro- ceed on his journey rather than be sur- rounded by nit these dismal people al the fable Whole in the ece►ing. Strange that in the midst of all this stem and ice nature shoukl have pro- vided a medicln'll fol bath available fee the Cure of disease. And perhapxl for every ill to which peer Ik•,h is heir there is a 'natural nntidote, though al present in ninny epees undiscovered. But for by tar the worst disease o1 tnan• kind, because if unremedied its baleful and deadly results envenom and blight the atter-life -Sin—a full, rnmplele and perfect remedy has been offered to all who will 118803)1 it, and without money and without price. For the Son of God 1.1 11114 love to mankind lore our sins in Ilis own body en the cross; and by 111- stripes we may be heated. 1•'IItsT SI'i.I'lll'It \I %TU.IIFS. They t\'ere Considered a Daring and Dangerous Intimation. In these days of rapid pr))gress U d. e., )cot hike long to make an apple ae.re old fashioned and out of date. Not nitre Than seventy years ago the match v. -as considered an innovation of a dar- ing end dangerous type. The censer- vnlive still scraped away w;th his steel and flim. holding the sulphur dipped slick in fear and trembling, One Hobert (elite tells the story of the first nenteh he ('.'r -•iew. .\ 1481100d- bltu\w who land \i,itr l L.,n•1.111 brought WW1; Willi 10111, be• . sloriea of (hal wonderful lees). 1 los .d Ihe new- ly unrested male, Ile exhibits,' 11.(414 to his wonlerung names and. (15 a great Enver, presented one to (:ibis. The bees look his prize bonne, struck it !n the chimncypicce and gleefully watch - al the surprise of his mother, "New you may threw away the tin- der lox." he said. "No such n thing." responded 1!e pru- dent w''man. "Matches et- . light have stood the test of syuamer atone for 06 years. They stand for ecoeomyd durability, will not creek, blister orfalll away. They preserve your bougie and keep it beautiful throughout the lifetime of pure paint y(eieg made ripe they are easy to work, last longer, lodk better and at just the right price. Ask your defiler. Write us for Post Card series " C," allowing how some houses are painted. NOT ONE PLACE, NOR ONE COUNTRY, BUT THREE CONTINENTS testify 1i lie Ite!iahiiltc, ;;111 f) irali!ity of ItueeS1 .\lotor ears, IN EUROPE. IN AUSTRALIA, AND IN AMERICA on all sides, Russett Renowned Reliability has become a by -word. And this is the Car made here, in this country, at your own door. BUILT FOR CANADIAN ROADS ON CANADIAN HONOit. Embodies the latest features of automobile excellence. Metal -lo -metal Disc Mich—Shah Drive --Selective Sliding Gear Trans- mission—Engine under Bonnet- Po1erful Double Set of Brakes on Brae Wheels—Nickel Steel in all Gears and Shells. Write for Catalogue and Book of Letters. Model D-18 H.P., 2-cy'l, Light 'Touring Car $(,600 Model F.-25 iI.P., 4-cyl. 'touring Car 2,500 Model F-40 H.P., 4-cyl. l'our'ing Car 3,450 Canada Cycle and Motor Co., Limited TORONTO JUNCTION, CANADA. BRANC'I(f(S- Ottawa, Winnipeg, Vancouver. and Melbourne, Australia. • i31Oui,,ave-t wilt find no place here. Why. scone night we might be burned in our 1)e(s! Give 111e (tar tinder box." A Salem, \lass., newspaper of June, .peaks approvingly of one of the inhabitants of its town.. "N',1'wilhslanding the convenience of those dnogerous little articles which are In utmost everybody's hand., but, which, with all their charms. hid fair l) prove e heavy curs on the community, we learn there is one man in Sales. a re- spectable tradesman who keeps a store where we should generally expect to find such Things. but who has never sold them "r 4411 1 ved them to he used on his Kenn.. s. Ile slicks to Iles flint, steel and liu.l •r : lie shows hie wisdom 111 so d..ing. 11 see• many more can say os much 11 t1:4lf(. DI1'01teh:'. Court Is less Popular That) !Sidle Thrust in tfllbanisleu. Afghan women. who possess a Jewish cast of features, are linnds.mm'. with complexions of anuses) pallor, bill some- times rosy. They are kept rigidly se- cluded, yet inlriguo)s are snid to le fre- quent. Ino a bullet or n dagger Thrust more "(ten Ilion not does duly for the diwnre a . nn f. Their 4'„tum a 1, of a ,most picturesque description. Ewen to ar plain and awk- ward /80111311 it imparts stone appearance of gruee. \ piran, or chemise, e'\1.1ols tram the throat to just al«,wc the :inkiest, with sleeves that reach 14) the %wrist, It i; Of clolh of g.,ld, vel\el. silk. i'nshmere ur calk.). saint in .shape net unlike cur grin^e.; rots'. Beneath this; tiro lone bens or pnjn na .. These may be of cloth or gold. silk. cashmere or calico, fin- ished off al the ankles by a fringe of diamonds. geld yr siker. .\ nomad cap worked all over with gold !humid .a) that it looks like gold elnlh Is tilted tinsel). 14) the back of the head. The hair. parted in the centre, is done uf, in tiny braids which are caught in a tank ,ill: embruider.st hug e% ore under- neath the geld asp. but Magilg deceit the back In below the waist. \tarried wont. 11 wear a i•inge e,f, hair. often curleed, on either side ..f the face. De- scending from the lop ..f the head to the hens of the piran, leaving the fere un- covered. is the gracefully draped (leader —a large \\ rapping of finest unushn, filmy gauze or delicately tinted chiffon. Black hair is in vogue awing the belles of the palace, and if llcvu tucks reveal any Mende, of fairness or sliew in- (licalions of turning gray. the vain crea- tures, ndopling the coelom of their Western .Osiers, at (nee dye them. Like all theil sex, loo, they delight 111 jewellery and the use of conspicuous ornaments. NUC.(W1:S. Cheerful looks make every dish a feast. Books are lighthouses erected on Iho gieut sen of lime. One in love with Truth need never ask about his repulnlion. Shabby clothes are no longer an al- lowable eccentricity of genius. Tice hunger of man for riches has re- duce,, chaos lo order, forests to gar. dens. Culture Indicates superlorily, and su- I eriority impresses others. A rough. rude, coarse manner creates an instantaneous prejudv_o, ck►ses hearts and bars doors against us. The language of the fact and manner ore the insllantlneous short -hand of the mind, which is very quickly read. --Sue Bess Magazine. LOOKING I'I' OYER, \I►w. Cit31y : "Bridget, who was that al the door just now?" Bridget : "\ teddy wantin' t' know If tw r had flu111,hed moms." \1rs, 4:teily : "\\'hatdid you tell herb" Bridget • 'Score. an' t (owlet her that all sur 1.,,111, Were furnished. She's lonknn' at th.' leb'ry now." (:01 1.1) 1('1'1.1L1.1' 71: 144 it. "Da yeti Think you maid learn to love me?' the young mann inqulrrl "Learn to give you?" exelainir4 the rapturous maid. "Ilnro!d, I could give ).111 lessons at it." or MO YOU To M diAT orf OM N- \ rr�Q.0 NY Pfor,rs! ere eleeri12 tbni oat r1! -ONLY r,: rtv �wAr.t�n� '4. data. e if tam, t _ 'Y