The Gazette, 1893-09-14, Page 7NOT WISELY
1 "And --affection ?" he questions, softly. " Do you think me so hard, so cold?" she
I have forgiven !"
BSI TIJ\)\JEL1J. '6Qlt, that, of coure, one does not ex 1
'altars. "ounS,I ago, t pert," she says, hurriedly. " I think : "And you knew-Iwas—free ?"
placid life is, after all, the best. l It
even if Heris like e yes ar ]l dden fwarm colour o sweeps his eager gaze.
.monotones in colour—safe, ' 6, yes "she says softly.
When Lady Etwynde had loved him, she somewhat dulL" - " And thepast,,is it all over ?" he says,
CHAPTER XXI.-(( to non ant had been almost a child—young, fresh, in• '6 It sounds rather cheerless," says Col• very low, as e leaves his chair and bends
e goesoceetq is too artificial to content me," t o th t, pure. She had abandoned herself one Carlisle, gravely. "Art cannot satisfy cry ds her. " Do you still think I will-
had
she on rapidly. " 1 want something to that love without thought or analysis. our emotional faculties, or fill our hearts as ,ugl•' Iy t deceivewoulddhave you ?"
more than amusement. I like to think. g$e had worshipped him as the nob human love and sympathy can." been kinder, wiser, had
like rational conversation. I like art, littlea lest, truest of God's creatures ; she had 66 Tennyson says, `The feelings are sang ou told me the truth at first," she says
as 1 can study or understand its great thought that to hem she was all in erns guides,'" she answers, bitterly; "and
s
toomewhat faintly.
teachings. I like all thatelevates the mind, all. No cloud had crossed the sky In the darkness of that shadowy room,
and is beautiful to the senses ; so I no sound distttrued the illusion ; in emotion is apt to make us capricious. Aswith the sense of his presence, with the rich
plunged headlong into the new school, its innocence and depth and peace, leer love to sympatlty,well I don't think I have out -
music music of his voice thrilling her heart with
and it has interested and occupied me had been en Its way as perfect as it was 66 But love, you have ?" he interrupts, the long vanished gladness of other days,
Do not suppose I consider it perfect by beautiful ; and Then suddenly, without
sof tl . ' she feels strangely, unutterably happy. It
any mesas ; but it has done much good --it warning or preparation of any sort, she.had Her eyes meet his in startled confusion. makes her almost afraid.
will do more. Ii you were interested in such
learnt that she was deceived. All their ordinary calm is -swept away. 66 One thing more," he says, and he kneels
glaring Had she known more of the world, had ' 6c Have you any right to ask such a quer at her and draws her hands within his
tliinga you might remember the larin col-
ours, the brilliant hues that made one's eyes she been in any way less innocent of mind tion ?" she says coldly. own. feet Have art and the world and the
ache not so very long ago. Look what love- and thought, she would have known better
His face changes. A storm of feeling silence of long years driven me , out of
ly shades and tints we have now. Women than to expect so much as she had expected. sweeps -over his soul, and for a moment your heart, for neither danger nor
required to be educated to some sense of She would have learnt the lesson all women chains back the impetuous words he fain bsence have driven you out of mine ?"
colour and fitness. However plain or insig- have to learn, that their love must accept would utter. "I tCld you I had not forgotten," she
nificant we may be, we may at least make the evil of a man's past as well as the good " No; I have not—unless a long faithful
of his future, giving a simple fidelity that memory of—you gives me any right." says, trembling greatly and growing vary
our defects less oppressive by taste and cul• pale beneath this strange tumult of feeling
asks no questions, and takes just what—re•His voice is very low, his face pa le, de
lure." is so full of gladness and yet of fear.
66 There I quite agree with you;" says mains, spite the bronzing of Indian suns. His eyes that12 gotten—but that is not all. Do you
Colonel Carlisle wondering a little how she But she had not known. Her dreams had rest en her with a great sadness and a remember the hard things you said to me
manages always to evade personal topics sbeenhale rudely broken ;her faith as rudely great longing in their depths. She is so when we parted? I kept back the error of
and glide back to the keynote of their con -shaken. Angered, outraged, shemeci, she mach to nim—this woman sitting there, m life, not because I wished to deceive
versataon. "Bat you lack neither taste nor' had been stung to the fierceness on jealous with the dying daylight on her rich•hued o , but because I feared the truth would
culture ;your words apply to quite a differ -anger, and her love had looked debased in dress, and the firs gleams playing over the you,
you, and I dreaded to wound your
ent class of persons. And if esthetics teach her sight as in his own, because of the false drooped golden head. So much, and he--- purity and belief. Heaven knows I -had
taste and appreciation of all that is beauti- hoods told and credited. Oh, foot that he has been to lose her suffered then, and have suffered since,
ful and people why, in Heaven's name, How could she judge of the emptiness 66 I thought men's memories were never enough to atone for a farireater mistake !
selvesdo these people make such guys of them- and weariness of a dead passion that faithful," she murmurs, in answer to his Were I to come to you now with love as
? he had only longed to forget, that he
" I have told you twice already that every dared not breathe to her pure young ears ? lass words. „ great and memory as faithful, wouldyou,
I know you judge them very harshly, knowing what was in the past, be gentler
creed has its exaggerators. How should she reek of the soulless bondage he answers, ouldly. " I only trusts that with my folly ? Could hen—love—me still ? I " Oh, yea. France simply wanted to get
<6 This 'creed seems to have more than from which he thought himself free? She the effeminate, long-haired apostles of your For all answer she draws her hands from contOh of the west coast of Siam clear north
its share then," ti says amusedly. "Moue had been him elf that am rxcuses looked new school may prove-inore virtuous, if his clasp, and lays them softly round his to Burmah, and she atzceeeded. This
rooms are perfection, Tallow—your toilette paltry to himself—an amorous infidelity less manly, than the old type." neck, and her head "sinks on his breast. places the western border of India wedge -
ss eiko-a Greek poet's dream ; but I confess that this great, pure, trusting love had She half smiles. That touch, that caress, are a new and shaped between France on the south and
I see no otherv like in" thinghemed and shown as the debasing,_ selfish << p purer baptism of the love that has borne
Physical strength is always impatient p Russia, her friend, on the north. Thia is
"Yoe arehan in kind to ngr tul she mart it vies, of anything weak or imperfect. A man and suffered so much in the years that are what France and Russia wanted. is
saylike yourself dwarfs most dead—dead as their own pain, and laid at day you. ncel see the importance wanted that
mars, with inwazd congratulation that And she would hear nothing—nothing ; of our modern rest for ever_ now, in a grave that many move. Atter the blockade was lifted, En-
g had saved her from the terra-cotta and in his heart a could.not blame would haveher. youth into insignificance. But there aregush eget wwill n papers said that of hat
noble souls sometimes in the feeblest bodies, tears have watered.
gown which, in a fit of "exaggeration," she "If she had loved me less she (To BE CONTINUED.) had been humiliated by England and that
had aboutoyou. " But I conversation
onvey at ask you in,ofhyod said c uhel, b f. The ust as---" the French people would make et warm tot
ery yourself. Our co r e returned
welts innocenceideals of youth is exactions
ac i, because great.its 3 " Thank nu ," he says, as she hesitates
are so its ac -
POWER, OF THE IMAGINATION. the French Government. Nothing of the
very one-sided. Have you returned to I;ng e tt�hought me ya�hero, and now hooonly " I can quite follow your meaning, and ac- kind. The French Government aucceedea
land for good?" • he
a beast!" rept Sheft ki doing just whaeFrench
they desired, and tea
don't "It will says somewhat em• And he had left her. She would never flushes hotly. „ How a Sa6Perer From Asthma Thought ile people applaud their successsi
barrassed. "It depend on one or two, forgive, he felt sure ; and all his pleas and "Pray do not misunderstand me, RadSeciured Fresh Air. "What do you think will be the reFuit of
things. civilized
1 don't know if I s quite fit for gn unfortunate asthmatic, compelled to the present complications between Italy
ots n not suppose
air,
life again. Ite seems to want the excuses only humiliated him, and never she says, hurriedly.
the pnntnventionality, touched her. "Oh, no he answers, gazing back into make a hurried journeyfrom home, arrived and France ?"
air, the freedom, Desperate, maddened, hating himself and Oh, it will aln g•Italy
the long night's spent under no p y and Franey s ll am going to war because of
ent of s ort his old folly, whose burden he could never her upi fte'd yes hia ovine ar jour o think he yhl meat night t a conntrsoi sn, wrest `� °.ant to nothin
roof but heaven s, the excitem P in life shake off, so he had passed from her Y g mots between tasty people."
that may mean death at any moment, the resence and her knowledge for thirteen I ever did that. It was you who n isunder- in Hygiene. Completely worn out, he gar• Did you see the military tournament at
thriliof engem life makerl of battle—thirteen P stood me." took of supper and was then anown into a �'
tontyears. g ++ I thou ht—I ho ed ou might have huge, old-fashioned bedroom, the further Chicago?"
years of such a one rather imps- n yes, and I was delighted with the ap-
tient of your effeminate doctrines, don't you And now the stoodasbefore her again and g P y
thought of past, forgotten," she says, in confusion. portion of which was only dimly iituminated peerages of the British soldiers. The Am -
think es " It is strange that I have not," he an- by a miserable candle. He was not lonericans bad the ban taste to treat them dis-
at
Yes," heart
etla the, with a little nice, "Do tell, Colonel," says the shrill voice ewers. " Thirteen years of such a life as in throwing off anis clothes, extinguishingcourteously, and they merit the them dis-
at her heartnthe dark,
f the manly voice,mine ought to have knocked sentiment the candle and slipping into bad. T:ae feel-
ntempt
++ of the Dresden China figure beside him, g P of the world."
s the look in the Bark, fearless eyes ; I "Did you ever shoot a tiger out there in pretty well out of one. But somehow it is ing of being in a strange place and the raid
yo ofolse l does. But therew is n need for Y' not easyto forget what pains one most. mental review of many incidents of his
}Duro follow the creed. Iwas only explain- India,lehand isit really so hot, and do tall he be soon crowded out of gas THE MAPLE ���F'
you ked.,, elephants come out at s tberennothin d knock
but memoryy sorrows cling to us despite d our- beat, journey,s combined withwithhe then later supper, 9
ing it as the houses down, and is gbroughtet,c m a wakeful, nervous condition AND
tt AULD LANG SYNE:'
+` And I don't seem to have heard half
enough about it," he answers seriously. curry and rice to eat, and are the ladies all selves."—
ellow,and have you brought any'punkahs' She is silent. His words fill her with a which induced an attack of asthma. Gasp-" What, are you going ?"Ygetup grope ;Wonderful S enfl in Connection With the
•
or tigers' claws hme with you,nd did you strange trouble. The past comes hack ing for breath, he scarcely knew what to
" I must," she says, rising from her seat. know Captain Dasher of the 40th? He went again, and she rens her girlhood's hero -a sinful,
do ; toqand ro e about such a large Toronto Military Tournament -
"I
ection
"The recitation is over. What a pity you out to Burmah last year." hero no longer, but a man, erring, sinful, room in nest of a door or window by which --
did not listen. Don't you like Baowning? Colonel Carlisle rouses himself, and looks faulty, as all men and women are and will he could admit more air seemed beyond his
might if i could understand him," And What Occurred when the Rand Fiayesi
at beginr answering
n He does not know how shefeelssite understandsd him better than powers.All
tat the once
far ]end ofe d the room he These dTwo W ent the r Airs
says the Colonel, rising also and looking to begin answering her questions.
mewhit t disturbed at the interruption ie Fortunately he is saved the trouble. she did in those days when she had idealis- had noticed, while undressing, a reflection
� hepromptly concluded A very touching scene occurred at the
Withth
thacontunforon. "I always sympathise
66`=fhy,aunt,there s Keith ." she exclaims, ed him into something grander, nobler, as from glass. TIai_, p P` Ya recent
with that unfortunate man in `The GoldenAm�ri. me,suddenly.Colonel
"He's come after all, Excuse greater than it lay in any man's power to stick'must hwhich he had placed o nda chair seizing
y The groulndsary tournament were crowded toin over1oror to.
flow ng
Butterfly ;' do you remember ? The Amari• got Comal r spat's theyyoung man I'm be.
can who sits up all night remember
study Brown- riga to marry. Will you tell him I'm sit- " When I left you," he resumes present- the bedside, he hurled it through the gloom, with one of the most brilliant and fes Ion-
ia 's works u because he exptoects him to din tin here, and he's to come right along at ly, gaining courage to speak on in the sil- His conjectures were confirmed to his satin able gatherings seen in this city this summer'
6'gence of the gatheringdusk, " I left all the faction,for the clattering on the floor of the enthusiasm was intense, and when the
cer who was offieiat-
ger" once?"
LadyEtwynde laughs. Colonel Carlisle bows, and retreats de -best part I inot saythat I dei lin t. heard ehadees of broken glass showed not only guessed rightly asnto the ngthat rse voice of as director the of occeeremon'es announced
"Yes, poor fellow, and he set himself li hted. deserveo me, but I will
gngbut had also the that the band of the contingent would play
such an, easy test. He meant to read __— it. Still, your conduct did not position of the window,of
h the whole collection in the course drive me desperate, did nnot make me reck- d cehisdedimagination smash inthairof the he panes.
es. In over selection
a dom Themomentary
band
passeduse nc
throng
a
of one evening. Though things,' I pride CHAPTER SPiII. less, rather filled t
n the
themselves on doing 'big things,' I fancy sorrow to think of how far i had fallen cooledifficr dbfresher,
ing soond cehaseparoxysmthe of few
crowd that e t was thenit dawned the apostle
that was rather beyond him. By -the -way, No one has been more aatonisiied at the short of your worth, your love—"
do yon like Americans? I will introduce news of Keita Athelatone's engagement 66 Oh hush," she interrupts. " 1)o yon being that he fell into a refreshing slumber Leaf," and a loud cheer buret from a thou -
he
than LadyEtwynde. It comes to her in a
thou -
yon to a charming girl if you do, and she is au=nine—a cold and strangely think I am so poor nodcontemptible ot feelat I the ingich he1asted till was surprised morning.
to findponthe daylight music.is awak- sand throats, Every pasagee]y wae applaudedto
y letter from L can listen to Y
not one of the a;athetie school, so you need written letter, yet one which has caused the sting of my own vanity, my childish ignor- streaming into the room from a direction the echo, and at the end the enthusiasm and
not be akirmed that she will inflict you with ( writer letter,errible pangs. I have exactly opposite to that in which, over- cheering was intense. Men waved theft hate
'art jargon."be When the left Baden they had gone to ante, and stubborn pride . Why,
" shall be veryhappy," murrieured the ; , yentertained a large never thought of my wosthat daywith-
iron uated. he Turning the idownndow the tom, master e sit- and gree Dusty repeated the number,ies their handkerchiefs. he aand
I „ Falcon's Chase, andout bitter shame ; and you—you g glance
Colonel, "only, really-- Etwynde. house art there. After Christmas Laur-he discovered rn that he had smashed a quan- again the applause was repeated, whilst the
bend -
" Oh, no excuses, says Lady 'sine was coming to London. She was not generous even to reproach me."of
"There she is, that pretty girl opposite. bleak air of the north " I had no right to
nor o that,"
he best, as
sI` formed glass, part of surely
window, but it had author, Mr. as he sup- the Army and Navy Muir,
Veteranssand whont of
was
You mustn't make love to her, though, for strong, and the cold,
thought ; I wished to spate you. You min posed, but the front of a glazed bookcase. in the officers' box, was warmly rousts n -
she is engaged. Her fiancee is not here . learnt her severely. All this Lady Etwynde very gently. 1 _ _ �_ fated eery Kirkpatrick. When the ap-
is q igbt• That to her beside her ; she by letters—letters in that seemed curt understood me ; that was all. byad subsided Kirkpatrick.
the band played "Rale
any hingconstrained—thatfhano way revealed " And all these years you have—remem- MUST IM1TAI'F, CANADA• plause had andubs a similar scene ed"Rule
is quite a character in her way."an thin of that inner life, those secret r
Colonel Carlisle feels no ambition to be in- springs of feeling which she had learned to tiered me?" she says, faintly, shyly, not came Auld"Syne," which tool
daring tri lift her eyes to the grave, noble sen American Jude Points Out the Way Nexte people by storm. Langge incident was veryn
atter, b either toof the "beauty" to say
or the char -
read and gauge in the confidence of that face• - to American
Confidence in the Judiciary, pretty, and the bandmaster caught the
aster, but he does not like di say so, and he est summer. '� Yes," he says, simply. "Chore is Judge Meckler, Richmond, Va., was a crowd to perfection. In was perhaps one of
is soon bowing before the radiant little figure P She is sitting alone in her room that is nothingso wonderful in that. You were nest t the Queen's hotel Toronto, the the finest demonstrations of sentiment ever
of "Dresden China." She loots at him ' like a cameo in the Itofi November dust daysf
with undisguised admiration. The "bigthe real love of my life, though you would other day. Speaking to a reporter he said seen in Canada.
the closing day. is some seting not believe it." that social order in the United States was _
man" has attracted- the attention of most since her reception and the meeting with Her heart throbs quickly ; the colour in a dreadful condition at present. In nine �—
feminine eyes to -night --all, the more per -
Colonel Carlisle. She is thinking she will comes and nes in her face. She is silent
haps because he looks indifferent, so bored, write and tell she Lauraine about it, and then for veryjoy,
f very shame. She feels_ so cases out
whet ten in the southern and
committed western
the hooka Murder
in non'
sa unadatiring: again she thinks ins had better not. 7 Y Aterrible musderwas penetrated one even
Women are more often interested by aunworthy of this great, true, steadfast murderers were lynched. The courts were inglatel bnCannonStreet,CommercialRoad,
byhis In this state e indecision of she is disturbed d that she so scorned ogee, that she had flung murderers
and the people, especially saran
man's indifference than flattered - bythe entrance of one of the a sthetieally P P P y g London. A fierce quarrel, lasting an hour,
t le cad damsels of her household. eke back at his feet in the bygone years because the past three years, seemed to have taken attracted the attention of the neighbors.
var
Homage. 'The one piques, the other o•ftenanother had shared, or seemed to share it, the law into their own hails. One of the
bores them. There es, after all, very It t " Do you receive,: my lady ." she a The rooms in question are occupied by a
pretty
eon in the ratty things" men say -to before herself. ?„ greatest blots earn the history of the United man named Edward Jeckaon, his wife, and
" P g y ea Lady
E her with a card. f you are not offended, I ho he says, States was the New Orleans lynching affair, four children. A messenger was sent to hi t
pretty women. It is" fettle wonder if the pe Y
na
Lady Etwynde glances at it, then blushes presently. He cannot see the tears that
constant of seeds -becomes monotonous ; hotly. P y where the Italians lost their lives. The wife's mother who lives near, and on arriv-
n diet ing: it s is tof athings the most «Yes," she says, turning away so that shine on her lashes , he only knows site is men had been tried and acquitted under ing she found her daughter lying flat on the
with acing ; it is changeeerefreshingfplin to vary ere her tell-tale face may not be noticed. She very quiet and calm, and fears that his due process of law in the courts of the land.
floor perfectly motionless. Jackson was
with acids; or it for plain food ; the words were too bold. The were shot down like rats in a standing over her looking in a dazed way,
feels half ashamed, half glad. The name t6 No• Whyshould I be ?'' she ass yY Ths mother said I believe she is dead. Yon
plainer the better, on the card is "Colonel Carlisle. Y trap were then n chance of liken rata their
Pretty and bewitching as "llresdento-day g tremulously.lives. The people seem to have lost all con have finished her at last. She sent for a
China" is, the Colonel seems to feel no in- She is dressed in olive-green vel -6: You did not believe in me then," he fissure not only in the jury system, and doctor, and said 1 believe the police had
vet, with touches of old theelllace about goes on. "Not that I litems you, or in- udi better be sent for too. Jackson threw up
conation to pay her compliments. He the throat and wrists ; golden hair is deed have ever blamed you. When a man consequently
simply 1themselves,
to this that
stands and listens to her chatter with the coiled loosely about her beautifully shaped loves a woman as I loved yon, he loves her the window and jumped into w set be -
sort of amused rl.indulgence he whatwouldtbeetow
head, and waves in softly tapgled curls and the judges would have to be low. He fell on his back, and the picked
onthe
say pretty Berl. He thinks whet a pity ripples above her brow. She looks very with not only admiration for her beauty, APPOINTED AS IN CANADA up and conveyed to the London Hospital
lovely, and her visitor's eyes tell her so as but reverence for the richer possibilities of
the American twang is so strong, and how PP
vulgar is the aunt, and marvels what the he bows over her slender white hand, and the nature into which he has gained an in- before public confidence would be restored. suffering from a broken skull anda is :mat-
gis like, and why he is not now bee sight,' I knew you were proud, and pure, and Many of the judges elected, at one time ed neck. The mother stated that Jackson
fianceemurmurs conventional find Freon a. g aced on watgive him by her earnings a fatten
-aide his lady -love. - And all the time he .6 I murmurs
glad toi you at home," he true, and I knew that in all my life I should were the lawyers for large commercial tor- wasgivento drink,and the wife hadalmoat to
ai ythink of no other woman as I had thought potations, and when these men apps
cannot keep his restless glance from follow- 6af Wait. Iwas right you see." the bench to try cases in which their for- boxmaker. He enlisted in the army, and
ting relic floating movements of that graceful
says. It is not my day, she answers, smiling people laughed at was ordered to contribute to her support,
figure in her creamy draperies of °Inst n up at the tail figure. "But perhaps yon Again she is silent. Her heart beats so mer clients appeared the
wa
silk. His heart echoes the poets word un- won't object to that. You would have fast, its quick throbs almost frighten her, their decisions. Take d ecaseofhad atl one pyich created was death, and appearances lust'
caaseioasiy : found a rowd here had it boon. ' what does he mean 1 Can it be— — men on strike. A j g
noneiike her -none! .� 9'' ' His voice breaks across the tumult of her time been attorney for the railway the men
throttled t her.
man had knelt on her and
There is An esthetic crowd, of course?" delivered a judgment holding
`" W-hat.wonld I not give to -know if she ,�= Chiefly ; but I have other .society as thoughts. no attention to the decision and
remembers still?" he says to himself. "But welL" You "said once you would never forgive committed a criminal act in striking. The To illuminate London entirely with else -
p Y And doyou live here quite atone?" he me," he says, softly. "I should not liken people paidstem
I am a fool to imagine it hssib'-e. 'Why ++ you to know how those words troubled me : went right on striking: The police system
tyle Rg wonid restate an initial ertdi
should she ? and how could she forgive the saka,_cari •
u mean how again and again they would ring in lily of the United States was bad, too- Every lure of at least folic millioita
iris sin now any more than in her young, s Da th a without - -dog ? Oh, of at some mo- Clerk (Chicago hotel)—s`What'a,_ weenen
ate romantic girlhood? And yet—oh, es. Although I dont _go- in for advanced -caret wh n Peatheaad 1 have�nearly shaken officer
effect.a politician first and this had a
baggage ?" Quest-a"bne VaBse, �flne lire
aA- iOn ,
_ ' en darling, if life lies taught ht" you wisdom:, thou ht, I. feel to see an unmarried men
y g}zc send a r a tea s�rtee;<
argil know thatlove has nothing. .woman can't live by herself instead of being hands, At such timed it seemed to me shave a sate way g man at high.
sola masts y anion. impossible that I. would ,ever a sin be n. as �� of string mosquitoes insnrai►ce po y � �".
the soulless follies in which igen bored with a comp ,: . - secure or.voletntar i seek et. .Yet,,, bat of a room, said the melan� hot do on is
ado with , find it lonely ?.: your pr Yon sty,=tint „an►'t>tg
lte iele�ue at nor,is there one t)ting .air Anci cion t you ,, a� a to say, I Have: done doth. Fate led the seaside boarding house. How « y Seg pardon, ' a; •
fns _, f. _, worth r have tame, she answers-, tram sty ^g y I 9» vest people at once. Igo to gF toateth3 tD eats I hsveeil 1iB
• earth the laded. ao enlistees an un __. y .. " I save ng do is • asked several
whose days are always frilly Deet;- the to you when knew nothing of where aei<f, " he replied. tert�mTes:'' f`£>'ti'
seeinghnspnrsuat ties b e base, gnit3y.-; - Y Y . wasoiag, end I flrid• rel, vronderin i#•aha
hasn't?"
y r 1 out of doors my
vi>eat=icmor u ` .saogth_ t shame, In A
en seri P T and—coli- Tape has sditelted- vont memory of the "Confidence is the mainstay of happy
,.
q every and r memory ins t e it b that
ter n shames ' And you are qu}ter happy y wrong I did you once, -if` ever you could find wife considers me the
The smohestacits of Deceit
� - - • married lite. My
'• e " it in `our heart th 8&g the words I pia cid _ �� lunch
teem: and from which their better" gelate tt<?�'
. la- i= as -an one can See, I sugpos, , y. ,,, p y most sbsolutel trathfnl man rn the wort , er than:_is gilt:
` _ -even to t - right, oa- — e e 1 g•. . As much 3i o t;in 'for Bien, ` i forgcve. _ Hawkin�.y `< Dear me, Sa thewkins 1 re- T}1ey tanl{e frdm fonrteea #i
recoia. , ow
err. ahe says, _a lent csonr egming slut
moat is ov P g Y turned _Barlow, S Y to dmeter. Phase-oi t
i : ,.tom _face. " e Ghenhif one etas _ -This tears s ria to beF_e es. The els said , ou have deceived •
did 114 lcnosr—tta:shotdd he? - , Penner, c.I rte
he _ Ue— ;,:..,an' necti»a on and interest r can neyey be renietnbered„ melte f bis venCe 'seems to I se
etre!!
' sting thiattgd
I-
"IT EES TOO BEEG--U P•'
m. Peltier s Opinion of the W one's Fair.
An lEs-giem?aer of lire French Chamber of
Deputies in Toronto—He Says France
Got Ali She Wanted in Siam.
M. Fernand Peltier, ex-nember of the
French Chamber of Deputies, Paris,France,
is a guest at the Rossin house, Toronto. M.
Peltier has spent a month at the World's
Fair, and was not much impressed. When
asked what he thaughtof the exhibition, he
said :
" The grounds are beautiful. The lake
forms a magnificent background. The im-
mense
nce
ent
a splendid sight, but thmile's
whole affairff�
itoo
( large for comfort. The state buildings cost
an immense amount of money and are used
only for purposes of entertainment. They
are never half full and yet they cover a large
portion of the space.}' The exhibition build-
ings inside are poor.
A FRENCII OPINION. ss said
"It ees too beeg—American—cheep,
monsieur, in his t'arisian English, with an
expressive gesture of contempt. He looked
on everything American as shoddy.
Ile went on : "Art at the Exhibition that
is meritorious is European. Foreigners
thought that they would have an opportun-
ity of studying an American school, but swan
discovered that there was none. All Ameri-
can painters copy the schools of the Euro-
pean countries."
" What do you think of the Siamese af-
fair ? Did France get all she wanted ?"
FRANCE GOT ALL SHE WANTED.
HODS
Flo3sie's
Says dear Cale
With an angry t
Of her curs, as
"\Vital under the
Now. could Iha
That >,houid ma
Now. itu:sedto
When foil ,• cam
My Pap t ari'1 M
Tney'd a -k for
Ca'.1 rne;�•�(
Now, they've fo
°' They don't note
But just that ha
That aiii't s?ot a
it 'Just lips and
WraPDetl up in
Away fro.n the
" And now • Papa
if I go very- nea
Wilt not take n
But says• `run a
My nig girl, as
Nothing semis
"Nnw, it doe= se
What should c
But I think I c
Yes. wit hunt
What brought
Was the buyin
Care 0
The hygienic t
tacked with diarr
Rowe as follows:
}When an infan
rhoea in the summ
portant things to
clean and cool. T
able hard work on
or nurse, bat it w
saving the baby's
by the sick child
clean and well
possible to give
much fresh air.
after each move
those that are soil
room to be wash
times a day of
water is not only
refreshing and su
that peculiar "so
common in summa
for the bath may t
but not tepid, as
ing. If there is
forehead and wr
quently in cool wa
to keep down the
A child sick
to be kept quiet
carried about the
This precaution is
seen many a mot
every time the ch
in her arms and
it would stop cr
ment will not onl
will make a sick
if it is sick with
A gro wn perso
ed or carried abo
cholera morbus, a
way.
A sick child th
so because it has
erally located in t
a case of summer
be comfortably b
and he on a firm
stances in which t
in a large pillow a
it could scarcely
Food : Much
for these cases, a
equal to a mother
self is in good hen
fed the bottle is
and the rubber
feeding. Two
water with a litt
good food for a b
necessary to ch
for what will age
with another.
scalded milk, ba
rice and milk, mil
- and a number of
may be used in t
Medical Treat
drugs used in thi
mention a few th
tient. I especiall
of soothing syrup
almost certain t
aggravate the dis
should always he
to be coated whi
cries a good deal
may be prepared
Take fluid extrac
powdered bismu
ounces four ; 1111
four hours.
If the dischar
and if there is f
Take fluid extrac
ounces four; n
every two or thr
vomiting a tea
will generally ch
a greenish charac
of the milk of ma
and give one-half
or six swallows o
hours.
In
Add a cap of b
tea -biscuit, mad
- three heaping to
der,a large table:
scant caps of ric
cuit as soft as pc,
oven. These a
luncheon.
Blueberry Gri,
blueberries or c
quart of batter,
bake like ordin
Hash. —Chop
well, then bake
When nearly
three eggs, br
yolks remain wl
of pepper, sal
place in the ove
enough to cut ti
squares of toast
Potato S lad<
layers of thinly
and two of onion
ing them, with
Make a dressin
thoroughly, a
sugar, one of
- of butter the s'
vinegar : sot in
stantly until t-