Exeter Advocate, 1909-09-09, Page 6THE MYSTERIOUS KEY
Olt, PLANNING FDA TIIE
FU 1 U1 l;
CHAPTEIR XX.—(Cout'd)
The evidence of the quer little ex-
pert had been listened to through -
Gut with almost breathless atten-
tion, and now, as ho coucludott
sattiisfaction back to h trotted with an air iwatf tethe various pelota of lave. Tho judge business with w a vieto having as lys. He perforins his duties ideal -
little trouble as possib,ein connec-, iy, constituting himself the memory
reaction resulted in considerable summed lip the case clearly and
logicull after which the jury re tion with matters pertaining to his acid sometimes the conscience of
excitement• tired and the occupants of the Income, and so over„thing was. the King. Lord Knollys opens
This elicited an authoritative c'curt rueiu schooled themselves to found to bo in the best possible or-' King Edward's letters, Sees all his
command for "order" and ''sil- what patience they conte to await der. telegrams, attends to all his die-
what
At the sante time the atti the return of a verdict. "\Nell, I have a proposition to patches, and organizes with mathe-
tudo of the audience in connectionIt was evident that neither John r make to you," Mr. Lyttleton re- u,atical accuracy the hours of his
with the prisoner had been empha- Ifubbard nor his accomplice looked sinned. Of course, you are at lin- Majesty's audiences. He sends out
tically expressed. A moment later forward with much hope of an ac- erty to act your own pleasure ;lint, pounds' worth of telegrams every
illi-. Lyttleton arose and remarked : quittal, for an air of unmistakable having had a. wide experience in year, and opens an average of 500
"To corroborate what the last dejection had settled upon both. life, 1 am going to presume upon it letters a day. Ile attends to all
witness has stated I will call Ellen The former appeared twenty years and give you a little sound advice." the King's annual subscriptions,
Carson." oder than when he entered the "It will be very acceptable, sir," which, chiefly in guineas and five -
John Hubbard nervously mopped court -mom three days previous. An said Gerald, smiling. pound notes, run into several thou -
his moist face with his handkerchief lison's unexpected appearance has. "You say you are not going to sand pounds a year.
Mai,and shot an apprehensive glance at almost paralyzed .n, while the live an idle tile," hisfriend oh- "Aunt Knollys" is the familiar
the young girl who mounted the amazing revelations regarding Ger- served. "That is a wise resolve, name by which Miss Charlotte
witness -stand with a rather timid old had aroused all the vindictive- a :d 1 would propose that you give Kuollys, whose indisposition has
step. ness of his nature a year or two to earnest and thor- been causing some anxiety of late,
But in spite of her evident shrink- It was simply maddening to have Sough preparation 'cr the bar. You is known to the younger members
ingfrom the ordeal before her, her the tables so cleverly turned upon have just, the head for law, and of tho Royal Family. To the Queen
withyour tern adherence to ria-
s uare chin was settled welt ack, him, to know that the magnificent P• and her daughters she is known as
with au air of determination, and fortune which he had coveted and ciple, your high standard of right "Chatty." For over forty -filo
her eyes gleamed with a resolute schemed for, which, ind :cd, ti.,. cud justice, you would make slaw- years :Mss Knollys has been a Wo -
tire which boded ill for the cause already been within his grasp, yet' to honor the profession. I tell man of the Bedchamber to Queen
of those against whom she was would now drop, like a ripe plum, you, Gerald, the bar is sadly in Alexandra, having taken that posi-
about to testify. into the hands of his "beggar" riv- need of men who will not violate tion immediately after the marri-
By adroit questions from Mr. al, whom he had always hated from their conscience and sell themselves age of the then Prince and Princess
Lyttleton the story of her life was the depths of his evil heart. for gold. We often hear it said of \Vales. Her brother, Lord
effectively drawn from her, and in The jury was absent only half an that 'there is no justice in law,• Knollys, is private secretary to tho
a way to snake Mrs. Adana Brew- hour, and this fact, of itself, was and it is, to some extent, true; King, while another brother acts
ster, alias Mrs. Alan Brown, cringe sufficient to destroy the last ray of,though I blush t' own it, the tricksit, a similar capacity for Queen
and shiver under a lash. hope for the prisoners. even before the falsehood, :.he bribery, and Maud of Norway.
\Vhen the girl told how she had the verdict was rendered. greed that arc often employed in The Crown Princess of Germany
crept under the old-fashioned sofa, When the fore:nen was caned up- the practise aro a disgrace to the la a great leader of fashion and has
where she had listened to the con- nn to voice the decision of the jury, Profession. 11 we could have a few herself started many novel customs,
versation between her aunt and be promptly responded: generations of honest men, the one of the most popular being her
John Hubbard, repeating in sub- "Guilty, your honor—the female tricksters would be wiped out, as habit of carrying a long, dainty
stance what they had said, there accomplice recommended to there would be some hope that 'jets- w asking -stick whenever she goes
teas another estimation among the mercy." Lice would be something besides a out. It usually has a gold top and
audience, and the woman felt that A despairing, though smothered l-yword and mockery. But, par- is ornamented with a colored silken
ber doom was sealed. cry from a veiled figure in one tor- don me," said the lawyer, sudden- bow, and the fashion has caught on
"1 have but ono nroro witness to Per of the room followed this dee- ly rousing. I had no intention of greatly among fashionable Berlin -
call, your honor," Mr. Lyttleton laration. Mrs. Adam Brown threw reading yo' such a homily when 1 ers. Tho Prin.:ess Las a large col -
remarked as Ellen was deceased, •'p her hands in despair, and faint- began." lection of such sticks, all ornn-
'whereupon Gerald sprang to his end away, while John Hubbard's "What you have said is but mented in a different way, and she
feet and disappeared through a head dropped heavily upon his true," Gerald gravely replied. ie able to select one to suit any cos -
door at the rear of the court -room. breast. "Good men and truo are sadly tunic she may be wearing. One
He presently returned, accom- Sentence was then pronounced. needed in the practise of the law. very handsome stick is mauve-col-
panicd by a black -robed figure, The forger was doomed to twenty It is hard work, up -hill work, ored, and bears her initials in
whom ho conducted directly to the years hard labor in State's prison ; though, fighting against the tide; rubies -
stand. Louisa Brown to one year in the wo- still, 1 do not know of any other Tho man who has created a new
The moment the newcomer turned man's reformatory. profession that I would prefer. J naval standard by designing Dread -
her face to the audience a half-stif- know of no one more capable of noughts is Mr. John Harper Mar-
led cryof despair burst fro;n John coaching ale than yourself, and I beth, a naval architect employed in
, P CHAPTER 1.l'I. would like to pursue m • studies
Hubbard's lips. y the construction department of the
"Great heavens 1" he breathed, Tho great Brewster case, with with you the saute as I have been Admiralty. Mr. Narbeth began We
and for a moment his counsel fear- which so much of romance and doing during the last year, though, as a shipbuilding apprentice at
cd he would fall in a fai;lt• thrilling interest were associated. Perhaps, giving mere time to them; Pembroke Dock, and ultimately
"The witness is Miss Allison had created no little excitement in while the practical ex ferience which joined the designing staff at the Ad -
Brewster, your honor, and 1 think Now York, especially among the I would gac-1 it working up meter niiralty. When the plans of the
she has something to tell the court Ieoplc who had intimately- known with you would bo of great benefit Dreadnought were first submitted,
which will be important as well as. the late banker and his fancily. to me—that is, if you can spare the they did not capture the fancy of
interesting,'' Mr. Lyttleton obscrv- The revival of the previous trial, time and have the inclination to re- the Lords of the Admiralty. After -
cal as calmly as if he were making the supposed death of Allison, her tain me under s:.ch conditions. wards, however, the nterits of the
a•• unimportant, ntattcr-of-fact subsequent rescue by Mr. Lyman, "Why, my dear boy, nothing design were recognized. When not
statement. and her unfortunate condition for w°11141 give ane greater Pleasure busy over his plans at Whitehall,
This announcement created no many mouths following, the remark- than to have you remain with me, Mr. Narbeth is to be found at
little excitement. Even the judge able discoveries in connection wit,' and I subscribe to the arrangement Wandsworth Common, where for
was betrayed into a look of undis- Gerald, who had once been a poor with all my heart," responded his many years he has made his home.
wised astonishment, for although otlice-boy in his unknown father's friend earnestly. Left fatherless when lie was three
be had not presided nt the previous employ, together with the, report "Then it stands," was the ami}- years of age, and his mother un -
trial, he had been deeply interest- that the newly discovered heir had ing reply, with this proviso, how- able, through lack of means, to pay
cc' in it, and had believed Allison, long been betrothed to the fair es er, t hat ?ow 1st ate help you for any better eclrcation than that
as reported, to have been a victim girl who had so strangely lost, and through with Lady Bromley's vase. offered by the State schools, Sir Jo-
in that fat d railroad disaster. now, through her litter, regained I have become so interested in it 1 septi Ward, Premier of New 'Lea -
"Miss Brewster," said Mr. Lit- her fortune, all Proved to be Most want to see the cud of it. 1 will laud. who was responsible for that
lleton, after she had been sworn, delicious morsels of gossip, and so promise to wo'•k faithfully in 1113 colony -'s magnificent offer of a
"will you state when, where, and the usual "nine days' wonder" far studies at the samo t'.•ne. Dreadnought, was considerably
under what circumstances you last outlived, in this instance, its pro- "Well, 1 must coctess. Gerald, handicapped in the early days of
raw the prisoner, Mr. John Ilub- verhially filleted timo. that pro% iso takes a load 0 limy his career. When he was twenty -
Joan! I" 11.1)cw it 1••as known that Allison ,start," said M r. 1.) ((101(1)1. a ith one he started a business of his own
Ile gave her an encouraging;.i Pe It as nirch r the chaperonage of Lady au unmistakable sigh of relief. It after trying various occupations,
a:, he spoke, and Allison briefly re- Bromley, her many society friends %t'e th! really be n great trial to be and nine years later he entered the
luted the substance of the converse- began to flock around her to tender obliged 1" initiate a green hand in- 'New Zenland Parliament. Ile is
Gni which had occurred between her their congratulations and geed to all the intricacies of that case, one of the fastest speakers in the
Ler-elf and her guardian on that l.ishcs. which. between you and me, I ant world, his delivery often retching
day in Newport when he had tried (ierald, of coarse, also receis0(1 1,eginning to fear we are likely to 300 words a minute, and rarely
to drive her int., n marriage with his proportionate share of attention lose.' falling below 200. In his younger
hien, when. alien her rejection of and it. was with no ,.mall amount of "Ali:" exclaimed his companion, days lie was a keen athlete, but
his snit. he had retenled to her the pride that Allison introduced ber looking disturbed. "Arc there any contents himself now -a -days with
fact that she wns not Mr. Brew- fiance to her fashionable acquaint- new adverse developments I a fishing.
rter's child. t hat another heir antes. "No: but that bulldog tenacity
caiim0d the property which had Titus, since the young man would and English conrrrvatisnc will, 1 - de
been t illed to her. and then boast- henceforth figure conspicuously in r.l afraid, eventually freeze me out. 1.1 1'h f\ '1111. ilt)dl`F:SHOE.
td of his intention to merry this New York circles, both in n busi• I'm going to snake one more des -
claimant, and tints accomplish the ness and social any, and being not perate effort, hewever, to bring Myth is Traced to the 1.1.00104 and
purpose he had in ilea. 1n seeking only personally but intellectually matters to a crisis, and, in order '1 heir Sea God Poseidon.
to marry her. She told how, fright- attractive, he was at once warmly to de that, 1 think we shall have
cited and almost in cicsimile she bad I,elcorned uithin the charmed cir- to take another sail acro« the Of all the emblems for good for -
gird from tier home aith the inters- ale. great pond before very long. Whattune the horseshoe stands among
tion of seeking the protection of "What are you going to do with do you say, Gerald," he interposed the first. Everybody knows it is
her cousin. Mr. Charles Manning, yourself new, my lucky mingtail- 1'itl, 'sudden energy, "to having a unlucky to Paas a horseshoe on the
and appealing to him to help her jionaire 1" Mr. 1.311lcten inquired torelittle wedding beforelinnd, and rand Without picking it up. It is
iu her trouble, and thus she had of his successful cheat a few Slays givitig the bride the usual Euro 6 lUckRalin awe aree:n of t c gre dcftrpow-
fal'etc a tictim to the accident which after the close of the trial. peen trip1 It would fix mattersto
1 ..d 1ery nearly proved her death. "Do I'' repeated our hero. leek- very nicely for Sou and Allison, and s
tatement have descended ntrumsi
fa-
/die also explained how and by ing sonmahat surprised at the quos- be exceedingly pleasant for us all.' g ' to son.
Rhone she had been reseue3, and tion. "Why, I alt going to keep on "I think it would be an excellent ttorr through.theyearom rs, sayer to s the
Mhy she had remained in obscurity doing just what I have been doing. arranscement, eagerly replied ter, Uaner's Gazette.
y
for so loose Mr. Lyttleton laughed out heart- Gerald, 'and I will propose it tin -The old myths repay research.
Mr. I.'tt1(1. a knew just how to ti y at this reply. mediately. The luck of the horseshoe has a
etas all t''ik out nl.'st effectively. -Well. that is rich," he exclaim- (To he continued) most respectable beginning. It is
all (I 1% Lon she conclilded there ane ern, "1 don't believe you half•rea- --.}-- - traced to the religion of the old
I ar.11s a person iu the n,.,'n rill() did lice your position if you are con I'ERSO\.11. 1'lll\'I'l:llg. ()reeks and their sea god Poseidon,
1.,.t leeirvr that her fern.: r gnttrd tent t•► plod along in my service as — . who WPM identical with the Roman
1:1i, .:.k. .tit• .'f the gr,•:lte-t seven- .1 cerlllhon clerk with a salary of Inlere llns C.i' ii► lbnlll sonic sea god Neptune.
e:l,•'- elite. tw0110 hu;ldred dollars a year l NotTo Poseidon horses were sacred,
As (hiraid attended his ie'i r ithed lent that what 1 should he 1'•r' glad I'rou►iuent 1'• epic. and to him they were sacrificed.
to a .eat. the lawyer sinip'y ob- to keep yon," be continlied with a Sir Samuel Black,. town clerk of Poseidon a as believed to have cre-
s' p • .•,I friendly glance at the title, thought- Belfast. Ireland. alio has just re- aced the first horse when he struck
• 1.•'. t honer, 110 re -t the case fel face t,.fore him. "but f aril tired on a pension of *10.000 a the ground with his trident and a
hete •' errata it would hardly be consider Sear, enjo30d the distinction ,.f be I,erse sprang from the hole, which
with you very much, Mr. Lyttle-icess of Wales is the Duke of Bronte,' hoofs deeply there the waters gush -1 ++++•};♦44...+++,.+++.4.41
ton." who was comptroller to the house- ed out and permanent springs were 4
"Thank yo' , my boy," said bis hold of her mother, the late Duch- found. •
fi lend earnestly. "It won't do, ess of Teck. Beside., being a hove- This is the reason why horseshoes 1 •
however, and you'll have plenty of list arid engineer, the Mike is an are reckoned lucky. Cluing to the! . he arm
employment fur a while, at least, iu ardent student of agriculture, and rout of the matter one sees a nature
looking after your estate and learn- has been made a Knight Commas:- myth as the rout principle. From 0
lug how to handle it•" der of the Order of the Crown of the sea all rain comes and to the, T
"1 am pretty sale that. will not Italy for the services he has rend- Eel. all springs owe primal origin,;
and to the rain and the fresh vvat- ! ++♦+++++++++♦++♦+++++♦
ers, Fea derised, we owe all fertil-
ity on earth. CALF ('Ilt)LEIdA.
The old Grcc ks therefore o worship- Calf cholera is characterized by
Fed Poseidon hiswl as the fortune giver as unnatural, increased action of
through springs• They gave him the bowels, the trouble usually ori-
hori,es, his precious beasts, ant} they getatiug from souse derangement
adored the footprints of horses u r the digestive organs lndigea-
when they found theta, for they tion often results from inactivity
might be the eery footprints of the of the bowels, improper feeding,
god himself. c r from being improperly house -d( �
When horses came to be shod the
transition of the hick emblem from Tho activity of the digestive or-� the footprint e s
int itself to the gang can be greatly increased by
} properly exercising the animists
and giving them plenty of fresh
air and sunlight.
When the digestive organs cease
to do their natural duty the calf
is subject to diarrhoea or scours,
which at this stage is not infectious
1 ut later on the germs may propos
gate and multiply, causing the ani-
mal to become afflicted with an in-
fectious disease, winch is common -
!y called scours in calves, but pro-
perly called calf cholera.
Calf cholera differs from diar-
rhoea in the full grown animal,
(eking the form of an infectious,
Bit) AGAINST HIMSELF. intestinal catarrh which is of a far
more serious nature than diar-
1\hen Sir Donald Gurria Was more
usually appearing suddenly
('aught Napping. :n young calves and in many in -
As a boy of fourteen Sir Donald stances causing death.
Currie the late millionaire ship- Owing to the fact that this is a
germ disease. it is vr.y i:nportant
owner, comrno.lced to earn his Ile- that the calf has .:one of the germs
ing as a barber's apprentice, niti- ;r, its system before it is born and
ntately entering the thippieg officefor this reason proper care and
of a Greenock relative as a clerk. attention should be given the Ino -
"Thorough" was his motto, and by titer while she is prevent.doing everything that came in hislfl
a
isafflicted with
way as well as he could he proved the germs of this When an animal of f le the rest
a valuable servant of the Cunard ' of the herd should be protected
Linc, before he struck out for him- against Santo by moving the heal -
self. How be founded the famous thy animals into new quarters and
Castle Line, and, amongst other carefully disinfecting the stables
ventures, ins... x2,500,000 out of wherein they are housed and giv-
tho South African first .ld fields— ing each animal a laxative to rid
being ono of the First to interest' the bowels of the irritating con-
ing
in these—is well known. 1 tents, atter which it should bo
Sir Donald was fond of entertain- given calf -cholera medicine. The
ing fanlo►ls people oat his ships, and ! roots of tail and hind quarters
as proud of their friendship as ho 1 should be thoroughly washed with
was of his mag: ificent collection e, i a disinfectant.—Dr. David Roberts.
pictures at 4, Hyde P.trk Place,
London. Talking of art treasures
reminds one of the manner in which CURL FOR A KICKING COW.Sir Donald was once caught nap
ping. Among a quantity of furni- To cure a kicking cow is often a
tore to be sold by auction on one difficult and tedious task, and,
occasion was a chair with the name, unless some method of restraining
"Dunott.ar Castle," ornately care- them from kicking ie adopted
cd upon it. Ile decided to purchase more loss than profit may result
it. and instructed a commission through spilt milk. The person
agent to buy it at any cost.. milking also runs considerable risk 'if!
The agentstarted the bidding at cf injury in some form or other.
825, and was surprised to hear an- When the cause of kicki :g can
other well-known dealer double his only be assigned to vice or an ac-
1.id. "Seventy-five'" shouted the ; quired bad habit, the following
ageete while the audience began to little arrangement will be found
grow interested, for the chair Seem- useful, and, nt the same time, sine
el comparatively valueless. "One plc, harmless, effective, inexpen-
hundred !" cried the dealer. "Ono sive and easily applied A Strap
hundred and fifty'" canto the about one inch wide shrn►Id be buck -
agent's answer. "Two hundred!" lecl round ea'h hinr leg a little
was the dealer's biting but practi- above the hock, suf£itiently tight
cal reply• to eompres•i the hamstring.
And so the battle ward, until Tho animal cannot kick, and if
the audience was breathless, and Pies are troublesome and cnuse her
the surprised auctioneer brought to switch her tail, the best plan is
down his hammer for the third time to either strap it to her leg or se-
en the elosiug bid of 53,:;50. A cure it to one of the straps with a
rumor went round that the secret piece of cord. Use the straps every
of the k4n competiti',n lay in the time the animal is milked. and
fact that the woodw.u•k was bol- after three weeks or so omit, to as -
low and was filled with notes and certain whether a cure has linen ef-
Government securities. But this fected or nut.—Irish Farming
rumor, like most of its kind, was World•
far from the truth. _---..
The fact. of the matter was that
Sir Donald, forgetting that he had ROCS AND ALFALFA.
clrcady commissioned chair
one agent to As to th amount of pasturage or
purchase the chair for him, had tn- the nuinber of hugs alfalfa will
strutted another, and the battle carry per acre without injury to
was equivalent to Sir Donald fight- the crop, the estimates given by
lig himself. farmers vary very conatclereble, de-
s pending on the kind of sial, the for-
GRON•1'li O1' 1'1.1 \T ROOT'S. titity of the land. and the sine of
tho hogs' past u re. Tho following,
Penetrate Potato and Narefs►aas However, is a safe estimate, ns giv
Bulbs Boris Into lee. en by conservative men who have
R had much experience. Upland of
The penetrative power of growing fair average fertility will rapport
roots s is very remarkable. tiom eight to thn head of the no to
Sometimes, for example. the root 12e po'ind hogs. There are fields
of a grass rune be found growing that have Puppt,rted 35 head per
right through the tuber of a potato acre through the season for a num.
or the bulb of a narcissus. her of years, and are atilt in Rood
The radicle of gerinihating wheat, condition; and there are other
again, (las been found boring its fields that will not furnish pas -
way into ice, while in other case's titre for more than five head per
the mots ie seedlings have been acre. but these are extremes. When
ro
known to pierce through tinfoil. a fi+'1<1 is only used for pasture it
Perhaps the host remarkable is better to dit the it into several
case on rscurd of such peuettatite lots end move the hogs (corn one
power in plant re.ots is that given lt' the other n'= 'i'a'ion requires.—
ItCi. Tornier in the 11ansartiens of Coburn's $wine in America.aBerlin natural history society. In e,
this case the underground stern or
rhizome e,f a s Age has grown right
through two eggs of a species of
lizard.
Where the sedge enters and leaves
the egg the shell has been dissoly-
ed away. The eggs were normal,
and in one care a rootlet was grow-
ing into the month of the embryo.
A somewhat different example of
the penetratke power of a plant is
that given by M. Deward in the
bulletin of the Botanical Societe of
France. In this case a diatom has
acted as a knife and cut in two a
species of protozoa. And it seems
to have done this in virtue of its
own motion, pushing through it as
an icebreaker gorse through the 1. e
be a very difficult task, for what- "real to Italian agriculture.
ever John Hubbard may have been, if Many stories aro told of Lord
t,.oralty speaking, lie was certainly `Charles Beresford's younger days,
a fine business lean—shrewd and! and one of the best re:ates to an
practical. Everything was specula- I invitation to dinner which he re-
tically Managed, and I ant confi-' ceived from an old cullege friend.
_ ��� j dent, sinco he expected to reap the ! For some reason or other Lord
iltlits of my father's labors, he Charles was unable to keep the ap-
hy their tricks and quibbl. s and could not have swerves: from his! pointule it, and at the last moment
habitual methods." Ibis waiting hoot received from hien
Three whole days were occupiedAnd Gerald proved to bo a truer telegram. "Sorry oa'.nutcome,"
in questioning their witnesses in Prophet in this respect, for the a read. "Lie follows to -morrow."
the cross-examination of both pian, having planned a long lion -Isis Majesty alone knows what the
d a.. I t} a legal squabbles over day for himself, had arranged all King would du without Lord Kno!-
e'. asiolls.
mark—practically the saute thing—
was easy.
Pegasus. the winged horses, from
whose hoofs the water springs gush-
ed copiously when tic carne to earth,
has been credited with the toigin
or the horseshoe ln„ k :
Tho horseshoe was the specific
against earthquakes. It would keep
a house safe from harm by earth
shaking. Again one perceives the
sca myth—Poseidon was the shaker
cc the earth.
APPETITE OF THE RUSSIAN.
.1 newspaper describes the din-
r.er given by a llussian naval officer
to his brethe'r (Akers. Ily way of
an appetizer there were served
salt lisle stroked sal►ron, imported
hcrrimr, Bologna sausage, pickles,
potato salmi. v'•dka ((Russian whis-
ky). and S(.4,t•'1, "hooky. .1a hour
later the dinner proper began. A
Russian veR( table soup. "..f reed -
lent savor, but unspellnble Dud lie-
1•roneuneealde," wane first served
Next came a allele baked '.$)rnof,
Sof regal dimensi„na," stliff'•.t lith
blown •'raeke(1 wheat. I' was
settee (q1 by all entire roe-, pig,
tvFree ' io'arel." were fillet) mit
-,2'tal,ica. Nest .•i'.(. 8 pe,1tliar
\t , .u,cot f.01e11 • trp by -tap file , , ti 0'4, peeper thing for a young Haan iug one of the highest paid public afterward became a spring. 'fhe i Inv -hot pie of meat. no, and lege-
se .. , �•r elill.•llte, (int .luh,l Huh- ,' 1„ur 1,r1: -Pat ,t=Ineling. ' offi,'lii!s in the three kirtgtl.•'t;s--his cin getl'ns the lord of !prinsr•. "fo 'Wele is getting used to p.il.:o• - *Iii„• cut int() .i ,r• (11141 jreTll1111-
1. • , • .1 his :'ewn'u•l dc'ib' ...(.y •Il'it i ant 1er3 certain) that I salary was 015,0`r1 a year ai�I.le he t:im all springs were nseribed In speaking. isn't h0 "Oh. ye'. 1; eel with ,,•:i,tar.l 'Then a Russian
I • ,,ry inch of gr.uid. :teal :am net truing to live all idle life... was al.,. til: o'd'•-t toe 0 clerk in the shape 4.1 a hors,, he •erretiinc•iremember when sou could hardly ' salad, Anel l:i tit .t('s+ert, the Nhu)e
I, ,, , e!r better 5110% in../ tai:1l ars% 1;ernld `in,'it'4)!'. returned. ".1 'ht Ite•..anJ Nandere(I by the shores 111x o e8J ��t"t IIIin tel stand up, all now you having been co.11' 1('(1 YItl1 chats-,
, ..: . ind have bclic''rd p,•s:',1c 1 ,int a'. re i have anjuyed my work The pint etc estact.iry t„ th Pri:1. .iun,nin, and silcre he &truck his taro bard's get him to sit dean.' 1pagne and liquors galore