Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 3 Feb 1898, p. 10

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,1 and gel." with The: “'0 I" the‘ {tn p_ra; life. plea To alo bu 01' ha :9; (n I» .r The (Wight has fallen on her face; sin is leaning toward it. and the rays, Wing her blue ewes. light. them up um any [loan like sapphires. ‘ ' " How good of you that is l” says she, slipping into a chair at the other side of the glowing hearth and amending out her gretty white fingers to the blue. " Just pretendingâ€"to please me .411“ we have made you comfortable. W011," with a sigh. “we’ve done our best, father and I; but it hasn‘t been finch. I know that." ‘ She hasâ€" stepped into the light of the jovial fire. and islooking down at him with a little smile. He from the depths 91 the ancient. armchair smiles back It her. !. " His name is Lucien Eyre, and his ap- pearance beyond argument. A better featured man it would be perhaps dif- ticullt to find. Miss McDermot came this conclusion early in his stay with r, and even now, when he is mending, amt one neezl not feel so altogether {sentimental about him, as when he lay "ztg'etched upon his bed, hovering be- tween beautiful life and hideous death. Ihe sees no cause to alter her deci- Ilon. As a fact, he is distinctly hand- someâ€"of the dark Italian type, one sometimes sees 1n English peOple. And It all events, his free laughing mouth and the tall muscular figure he pos- Iesses are essentially English. “I’m, a swindle!” says he. "I feel as well as any fellow, onlyâ€"" " Only what 8” “Only I don’t want to go." any 8 he, In a __low tone. but boldly. She usedtohe afraid of him at first, when she learned he was so near to a titleâ€"afraid of the poverty of her oun surroundings, that must he felt by him no long as he was her father's guest, but he had proved so bright and so gay. and so grateful for even the smallest mercies. that her heart had gone out to him. Even the difficult Bridget had been conqueredâ€"in a measure. “ “fell, how do you feel ?" asked Dul- cinea. coming into the room like a. young spring breeze. all life and fresh- ness. " Tiredâ€"eh ?” Yesterday he was well enough to be moved down to one of the lower roomsâ€"a rat her gaunt. impossible room that had once been a schoolroom to 'udge by the general break up of the urniture. Miss McDermot had wished him to be brought to the drawing- room. the one decently, if poorly kept up room in the house, but he had beg- ged to be taken to some other place, where the advent of visitors need not disturb him. So the old schoolroom had been requisitioned, and a comfortable ehair put into it, next to a roaring And after all he has not proved an artist! He has never “wandhered” in the sense Bridget had suggested, and certainly be has always had a grand- father and a roof over his head. In effect, ha in a young man of family, and next heir to a title. his father be- ing dead, and hfe an only son, and his grandfather Lord Branscombe. So there certainly is no doubt about the grandfather. how to keep their guest in the little delicacies needful for an invalid with- out this help. The McDermot to whose sins inhos- pitality certainly never could be laid. had made his guest. as welcome as pos- sible. Lord Begmore. too, whose guest the young man was, had been assidu- ous in his attentions, calling every oth- er day at first, and to the present moment sending flowers, fruit and game. These last were a. godsend to Bridget and Dulcinea, who, with the short purse they held for housekeep- ing exvenses, would hardly have known was staying, and the subsequent im- mersion in the castle bog, and his ex- ertions to escape from it, all had com- bined to render him as weak a crea- ture as nature ever kept life in. To remove him had been impossible. A whole month Thirty full days and still the young man who has been brought in fainting to the old castle of the McDermots is the McDermot’s guest. The doctor, summoned in haste, had pronounced him in a highly fever- ish state and unfit for removal. He had broken his arm out shooting in some unaccountable fashion, and the walking for miles afterward trying in vain to find a short out to Ballybeg, the resid- ence of Lord Begmore, with whom he gmnel” It is a month later and now very close to Christmas. Soft wreaths of snow hang upon evâ€" ery bouzh. Nature has spread herself a msnth no white, so chill, that scarce one dares to dream of life beneath it. In the old house. if nothing else is plen- tiful, fires are. To the McDermot warmth in goldâ€"and so much gold he grants kilnselt if in other ways he is g‘ompelled to study, strict economy. Something in the brilliant glare of the huge pine logs lying on the massive lumps of glowing coal remind him in a measure of the days gone by. when he could hold up his head with the beat, and keep open house for all his lriends. ”When a man is old And the weather blows cold, 2211 (are a tire and a turried gowne; flat when he in young And his blood new sprung. His swatheact is worth halt the FHA PTER III. w, m, w “ You do not object to it?" “I dan’t see that I have an; right to object, the promise once given." says she rest-lessly. “ Butâ€"I do. forell that. It was father’s doing. He thinks Sir Ralph perfection.” She shrugs her shoulders. then suddenly turns to him. “ Fancy I” says she vehementlyâ€""Fan- cy a girl being told she must marry a. men whether she likes him or not I" “I can hney egifll being toldtodoit. " Why should I try to love you 2" says she. tears rising in her eyes. “Why should I try to love any one? I tell you, 'I am bound to marry Sir Ralph. andâ€"I must fulfil my promise." “Surer not if you yourself object to it." » “ To what i” ‘f To the promise." Her sudden defense of the man whom she so plainly does not love has struck him as a. touch of nobility in her char- acter. He can admire it the more it seems to prove to him that love has no part in her defense. ~.“ The thing I do want to know isâ€" Dulcie, look at me. Tell me you will try _t_o love me." . “ Well, never mind w hat I have said, " puts in Eyre quickly, ' “ He is not a mean hound." says the girl, quickly. “I may not want to marry him; I may have been persuad- ed to engage myself to him; I may not care for him in the very least; but he is not mean‘, and he is one of the kindest, best men I ever met.” " And tieâ€"'Sir Ralphâ€"does he know you are being coerced into a marriage with him ?" "I don’t know what he knows." “I! he does he must be a mean hound!" cries Eyre, with passionate contempt. "I’m in love with ”nobody,” retorts she, with crushing meaning; “but fa- ther thinks it will be a. good thing for me to marry Sir Ralph." “ A-nA Ln o:â€" n_1_‘_ 'I ‘ ” You can. believe what you like,” re~ turns she, loftily. Silence. ‘ “Well, are you in! love with him ?" demands the young man, presently, with open Ire. " I believe yofi are in love wfth him,” sag'g, Eyre, gorgewhat sulkily, 'O'I'dop’t thi-nE Be is so ugly as you thm‘k mm,” says she evasively .‘T LA1:A“A n--- - _._ 1- _ .I‘ Q. “ Then A'nketell is as ugly as some- thing else. He,” gazing at her anx- iogsgyt " hue _i_s_u‘gly, isn’t he ?” “Oh, no, he isn’t!” says Miss _Mc- Dermot, quickly. “He is thirty-four.” “ Looks more like ninety-four in my Opinion, and as ugly as sin.” "I have read samewhere that sin is always beautiful,” says she sentent- iouslw. “Dulciel” cries he. “ Oh, no I" cries she. ” Don’t touch me. It is so absurd. You couldn’t be in love with me in: a month, could you ?" ”Couldn’t I?" says he. “ \Vell, even if you could,” says she, shaking her head, dismally, “ it isn’t of any use. Father 'has made up his mind I am to marry him." U x‘Tho g,' “ Sir Ralph Anketell." “ AnketeJl ?” “That! Nonsense." says she. “’What didn’t occur to me was, that you were -were-â€"-â€"” she glanced at him shyly and shamefacedly, “wellâ€"wereâ€"you know." , “ It didn’t.occur to me,’ says Dulâ€" cie, opening ‘her fingers in her little explanatory way. "Never! not for a moment; ?" “ What didn’t 9" in a puzzled toneâ€" " your engagement. But really you must have thought about that some- times, any _way; and, besidesâ€"” “Ah! you don’t' know,” says she “ This one can’t be broken.” “ Why not? A'ndâ€"whoâ€"â€"-â€"? Oh, Dulâ€" cie! I think you might have told me befqre,A_something about it, “ An engagement! \Vhat is that ?” cries he, eagerlv. " An engagement can be broken. Blessed thought! Now. if you had been marriedâ€"though even so --well; but an engagement." There is so little joy in her announce- meatâ€"so little of anything but grief in the hanging of her dainty little head. that grand courage comes to him. Being a young man of the world, this declaration might, on another occasion, have given him food’ for mirth; being. however, a young man of the world for once honestly in love, it only gives him food for consternation. “ Engaged l” is ail he can say. “Yes,! yes! Indeed !” hanging her head. “ Know about you 9" “ Yes. No man must love me," says the girl, putting out both her hands. as if in renunciation of all. affections. “But why? Darling, why 1" “ Because I am engaged to be mer- ried," returns she, with terrible sol- emnity. me 2" . and I took them . . and you . .you blushed. . an”! Dulcieâ€"” He breaks off suddenly, and rising to his feet comes over to her. "Dulcie, I love you.’ “Oh, no! Oh, no!” cries she, sharp- Iy, rising in turn, and drawing back from him. “You must not. You can- not. You cagnnot. Don’t you know about “H’m!” says she. using the light, soft questioning sound that belongs to her, and that has often struck him as being so delightful. “ No, you have not undemtood,"says he now. "Dulcie don’t you know why I don’t want to leave tâ€"why I would rather be an invalid forever than leave? Don’t youâ€"don’t you know 2” “ No.” says she, shrinking from him a little, and growing pale beneath the firefight. ’ “Oh, you must know I” says he, ve- hemently. “For a whole week I have believed you knew. Last Monday. when you brought me those Christmas roses, youhgwgag,‘ ieaBiâ€"fiéfowgbd bier: “And -â€"-â€"-?’ he paused. “ Have you understood me ’ “I am not pretending}: Lsayguthg Why, he’s tw1ce your age." H 'Auut é‘m'elim. what is ' harmed. V hWoll balanced! Well, it 9.6993 enough- to make an ‘v v â€"--“w VL shrimps, twenty ox tails. 800 cassellotes and. bouchees, fifty-five trout, sixty, quarts, about. of sauce {unwiseâ€".3 white sauce in. which. with other in-‘ gradients, crawfidb butter is incor- poratedâ€"sixty thiau‘nches of deer 110 quayts bf mushrooms, 110 fowls, 800 truffles, and eighty du'cklings. Bosides all these were the materigls for the des- four‘sections. each consisting of three chefs, five helpers, two ice makers, and a number of others. making a. total of forty persons to each. section. The proyisiong oogsisbed_o§_ forty pounds of ask, tablecloths, and eighty candelabra. The service was in charge of four heed waiters, each of whom had fifty-five subordinates under his control. The euli'naryudepertm'ent was divided into l‘wo Hundred and Twenty Wailers Were Beqnlrc'l to Serve the Kennel, Since the simplification of means for public and private dinners has become universal, the task of feeding a large numLer of people at one time is much these complicated than formerly. Our ‘ public dinners are noted for their per- fiection of detail and of service. The French; however, are a close second. At the banquet given recently to M. Felix Faure by the Chamber of Com- merce of Paris there were present 755 persons. The dinner was served in the large mtaetiirn‘g-room of the chamber, which is occupied until 5 p.m. The members declined to cut short the. hours of business, so that the caterersl could begin: operations only after the adjournment of the day. They had. therefore, only two hours or until 7 p.m. to complete all the arrangements for the banquet. In that space of time eighteen tables were laid out with all their equipment.._This, in part con- sisted of 12,000 plates, 2,500 knives, 7,- 000 glasses, 3,500 spoons, and 8,000 forks. In addition, there were eighty baskets of fruit, as many of flowers, 300 .sets of petite fours. about 500 yards of dam- She starn'pe her small foot upon the ground, and then suddenly, for no such great reason certainly, she covers her face with her hands and bursts into a storm of tears. - "I saw it indeed. Dulcie, why think of him at all? 'Why care? He is be- neath your notice.” “Oh, he is more than that. He is a wretch. I hate him 7" cries Dulcie, vehemently. I offered to go with: him, didn’t I? and you see how he treated me. You saw it,” glidn’t you ?" “I can come now, if you want. me," says Dulcinea, perceiving her betroth- ed turn to the doorway as if to go away. " Thank you! An hour hence will do very well.” replies he. coolly, and closes the door lzehind him. “ There!" says Dulcinea, looking at Eyre, with angry eyes full of tears; ‘_‘ Wyatt do you think of that? I’m sure. “Thanks.” says Eyre, not too grac- iously. They have, of course, met during the past month. “Very {glad to see you looking so much better," says he, with a ghost of a smile. She rises with perfect calm, but in spite of herself a. hot blush springs to her cheeks. She walks with a. touch of defiance to the door. “You want me, Sir Ralph 9" “ Not hereâ€"not now," returns be, his tone ten times colder than her own. “ if you will give me five minutes by and by in the drawingâ€"room, it will do. Pray don’t let me take you away frgrn your guest now!" He fiausesv and looking toward Eyre compels him to be civil. “ Miss Dulcinea I” says Mrs. Driscoll. appearing on the threshold in her best bib and tucker and. her worst temper. “Sir Ralph wants to see ye. He’s just ridden over from The Towers.” Behind her appears Sir Ralph. “Wellâ€"here I am.” says Dulcinea, coldly. At this moment the door is thrown open; “ Well ?” “Well-J said I didn’t." “ Then ?" significamly. "‘Vhezn he heard I didn’t love any (me he seemed quite contented." “ But did it never occur to h1m that in the future youâ€"erâ€"might love some one? Eh ?” “There is so seldom ‘some one’ here.” ‘returned she, with a sigh. " \VhatLt‘fiéé‘i didn’t love him? 1:9; There was nothing §o gnuess abou . “ You didn’t tell him? . “I told him I had no love to gwe him.” says Dulcinea. “ Well 3’" " He asked me then if I loved any one." TH E “ He must be a fool.” says Eyre. With conviction, and might have said more perhaps it the dark blue eyes had not suddenly raised themselves to his with a rather menacing expression in them. "Didn’t he guess ?" asks he .hastily. 1‘" “That is enough for me. But Afl- ketell?” “ He knows nothing. He proposed to me through my father. I hated that â€"rebelliously. “\Vhy could'n’t he have come to me direct Y" “ Why. indeed 9" “ He said he was afraid when I asked him,” says the girl, with o. frowngng bPOW. and Speaking as it addresslng herself only. “Butâ€"afraidl: “~“ You 'mIeaInâ€"” hotly. “ Never mind. what I meah‘ just now. You tell rub it was your father’s do- DINNER FOR 755 PERSONS. n To be Continued. 0F EQUILIBRIUM. ‘ .tht is being well 31: Well, it is 9!"!!! m‘.‘ _.___ ing 175 (1351!. - 'Fhseâ€" Ear-1;. 3:31}; ”of materials is increasing. either through greater se‘ngitiveness on the pcrt of t'yeoauthontnes or through the Kaiser’s ished m’roroo seven childrofi under 15 years of are and 281 other persons under 21. Earl Rumll. freed from his divorce One branch of the Bourbons has learned to forget, and is trying to live up to modern ideas. Both sons of the late Count of Aquila, King Bomba’s brother who married the late Emper- or ot Brazil’s sister. married wives of non-royal rank. one of them an Amer- ican girl. and settled down as loyal It- alian citizens. A grandson of the Count has just become engaged. with his parent’s consent, to a young wo- ed queer, the sum was blue red. and many people concluded that the world was coming to an end. At one public school. the children were seized with a panic, which was stopped with diffi- culty by the head master. who later kept the whole school in till it had made up the time lost in the scare. There was a hot time in' Adelaide. Princess {I‘o‘uo Maruan of the Fiji Islands. according to the Berlin Box-sun- blatt, is about to visit Eurorne in search of a husband. She is the heir to the throne; has ah income of $35,000 ayear from the British Government, which will be doubled on her accession, he- sides her domain lands, and is looking for a well-educated. man of good birth. as the Fiji Queen’s consort is her Chief Minister and Chief Justice. In Ml Italy there were but 920 duels fought last year, according to the reâ€" cord kept by Commendatore Galli of Milan ,and 0’ these 103 had serious con- sequences. Only one duelist was kill- ed on the spot; six others died of their wounds. Of the serious dueIs seventy- five were hiween civilians, fifteen be- tween bfficers, and in thirteen officers fought civiliansl. " Mr. Stuart Erskine," is the name under which the bankrupt Earl of Ros- slyn, ,the first British fleet to become a professional actor, will appear in the cast of Pinero’s new way. Through his mother, aFitzroy, he is a descendant of Kink; Charles II. and Barbara Vil- liors, Duchess of Cleveland. Emm‘ess Elizabeth of Austria, has col- lected the photOgraphs of all the pret- fy women shle has seen" during the last nine years. To each picture is attach- ed a statement of the name, age, and condition’ of thie subject, with the date and mack. of thb taking of the photo- graph. ‘ \A hill-Irmsting' combination has been turned, into a limited liability corpor- ation in London, with a cayiitai of 312,- 250,000. If. hoflds out. as an inducement to buy shares a. number of contracts it has for hi“ posting at the rate of a penny a sheet per week. . Berlin University. owing to the large number of foreign students frequent- ing it. has established an instructor- Bhil’ in elementary German to enable them to learn the language in which the lectures are delivered. Princess Theresa of Bavaria, daugh- ter of the Prince Regent. has been . . _ made an honorary doctor Of philOS?‘ my mam t1) DI‘UduL‘e all» «:1 ivy-lion. phy by the University of Munich. She is The Wt is gradually villain? l by ialso a member of the Royal Academy theuse ottighter and tight,” in», :am of 601811088, 18 48 years of age. and i that produce in the organ the neighborhood 0f ”18 GO“ 0035'; they four toes and their melzitur have been exterminated and last year the colony could collect only 67,660 moon- key skins, whereas in 1894, 168,405 sluns, valued at $205,000, were eXported. Railroad traffic in Germany has in- creased to such an extent that the Gov- ernment finds it necessary to. four- track’ the main lines in \Vestpbaha, and the Rhine movinve, with the prosmct of extending the improvement soon as . _ . .. far ‘33 Berlin. “mt Itls always mom 01- 1*5“ii5' Paris’s police is trying to discourage [dazed and raises the skin of u...) {not murder‘ as a business by showing that which at this level, mean)“, m”, it does not pay. Out of twenty-one re- ates. cent murders the average profit toeacb After the fmt has obtained a >1in- assassin was $16.37: and in many Of silent degre . , e of atrophy. and a? Ire these cases the murderer was caught cost of considerable pain, the par; and "gout“? ‘ , , (311$an Wanna has not yet 13.14.»: A bill-posting combination has been suffering. She has to keep h“, W1 turned into a limited liability corpor- constantly bandaged in order n. w atiom in‘ London, with a capital of $12,â€" able to walk. ““1 even then 1* “DE! . walk is ' ~' ., v, .~.~ ., 250,000. It. holds out as an inducement the foot fig‘bfiout If: 3.175.349 ii to buy shares a number of contracts ‘ , , the leg, which is reduced to the ~21 tie rt has for bill posting at the rate of of , . ‘ ‘ . 3 {Jenny a sheet per week. a skeleton. the mumles disdmo H‘- . ing and hardly anything remriilzinfl Emnu‘ess Elizabeth of Austria has 001- but the skin and bone. I have no intention of passin: in re- V‘i0W all the motives that have been ad. duced in. order to explain why the Chinese have for ages past, hindered the feet 0‘ women. since one 1\ Just a: unlikely as the other. It ix at until about the age of four or fixe 3 :lz'.» that :1 iii llhle in nu amund the first metatarsal. l‘re A- feet of this first movement i~ 1‘. “Hail the foot into two partsâ€"om m” Hem anterior, comprising the toes ax.- : 13.: i1 metatarsal, and the other [whirls 1‘ :nd comprising the calcaneum. 'l'lbo mm- hD'id bone, which in this work , Lbs part (i 8. hinge, is elllirvh' 13:? tut Railroad traffic in Germany has in- creased to such an extent that the Gov- ernment finds it necessary to four- track‘ the main lines in \Vestphalia, and the Rhine provinve, with the prosmct of extending the improvement soon as far as Betlin. Princess Theresa 6f Bavaria, daugh- ter of the Prince Regent. has been made an honorary doctor of philosn- why by the University of Munich. She is also a memlmr of the Royal Academy of Sciences, is 48 years of age, and a spinster. Africa’s monkeys are giving out. In the neighborhood of the Gold Coast they have been exterminated am! last year the colony could collect only 67,660 mon- key skins, whereas in 1894, 168,405 skins, valued at $205,000, were exported. Berlin University, owing to the large number of foreign students frequent- ing it. has established an instructor- BhiD in elementary German to enable them to learn the language in which the lectures are delivered. Herr bieden, the senior member of the German Reichstag, is 87 years of age and has sat. in every session since the empire was constituted. He had also been a member of the Prussian Landtag continuously since 1854. Lord Alfred Rothschild sent a. brace of pheasants to every o'na of the 3,000 drivers and conductors of the omnibus company in which he is interested as a Christmas present. WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. France is hastening to make J iboutil, on 'the Red Sea. the best cart for Abys- sinian trade to counterbalance the ef- fect of the Italian transfer of Kassala to the English in Egypt. Old and New World Events 0! Interest Chron- lcled Brieflyâ€"Interesting . Happening: 0! Recent Date. A telegraph line recently run to Coo~ massie from the coast is highly appre- ciated by the Ashanti natives. They cut off the wire in suitable lengths to make armlete. ’ . Daughter. Winter of 1898â€"011, mu- that! MN'B a, lot fi wow and ice outdoorl. v w" v-v The Chinese regard a. defofnn‘d I‘M" as a thing 0f beauty. What, “MIX Queen. Victoria say were she in IH'UH a. petition signed by numerous (‘er tlals asking her to forbid the Em‘vfii‘l damask to wear corset" 800.16 0‘ the Watery suck-tins. and Wally m 0f the female miwi mâ€" Emmi, mm for COM time past i'w'n Wag ‘ war against this 904340.! barbarous ,custom. They even ad- (1W. Tm ”James, luSvP«'i.illg that waist»! to transmit their rv- quwt to the Empemr; but. he unmx'm‘Wf them that thfi Son of Heaven paw hi: auktiectEt-he fight (.0 d0 as they Mmm‘mi Alf mm WWII do not, IUHO «it"- formed feet. This mutilation i~ m' I" frequent in the south than in Hm {191131}. and in cities than in th rum; d’ t8. Thu Manchoo women are IM- authof'im t0 bandage their fem: AIM 9n thy} wbjwt them are very lux'mu-‘A umpenal ordem Push may upeot them. A {on I- so 3100’} the more appreciated in 1-H"- ppmom as it is smaller. Among the mob China” ladies it does not ”cud 51-4 inches. and the woman is plum- ar of 1m: foot than of her tam. The Chinese woman. is very Ihwirst when it in aquatic“ of her {m-t. I higve soveml times ttteoded mantiu rins' WW6! Who were afflicted uith {wt troubles. 8M. Who museum! only “1111 great hesitation, and in bluejjng. In 911W themaelves to be examim-ai; a?!" mthen they marrenged 1119U1\t‘.\‘?-‘ 88 to 61” only film ailing part. _ “'~O This atrophy of the leg comtrlbu Le» in a. great measure toward increasing Ile trouble of walking and balancing. The Chinese women can we’ll: only with a Shoe made to fit the form of her fwt. This is provided with a. flat. heel xx H h alone serves as a point of support In: the entimbody. The point of the {nut does not touch the ground. and the women w'elkeomewbat like cluld: '- 0‘1 persons. They are not very stm :y upon their feet. had when thvy hu- come aged have to use a cane. 'Hry walk Wlth their tune slightly exlm mi and. performing the office of a. l.u...x.:-'e pole; and With the pelvis throxsn hack and. the it“ Slightly forward. 1hr y am um breast Slightly forward. they 8002}! to be eudeavoan-g t0 prawn? their center of gravity. \Vhen m it 1163!: am close together, the 813;}.Io-ht 1% small foot of the C hincw \s'oman, which the Cdlostials call by a name dgwying “golden lily." has a!“ ays ex. cited the curiosity of Eurowun‘. Writes Dr. Maximal. By May 1 the (30080113331323.1â€"1‘ Matadi and Stanley Pool “in l plebed 0nd open for traffic. In the m. I I]! of mber the rails had been laid for 348 kildmetres 0f the 388 our. cm by “JG line. the roadbed for ten ”.1th more was finished. and men ‘ were at. Wdl'k on the next. Ln) kuomo. ~ tree. bringing the line tn mum thir. ’ been miles of Stanley Pool. The iron bridge over the lnkissi will he put in place it the beginning of J unwary, The November receipts from truffiv 0n the part of the road in operation Mere 2400, 000 trance. “an 3 00m m mulliimoheu, at: of “'3 recent typhoid! fever out“ when the Eu! is one of the Board‘ Guardians. be discovered that they N bathed. forty trauma in six bathtulm water. With some difficulty be m through a [moment to use the Mm water for only two or three ”mom one overseer objecting Um, ~ . not know when they mm- thing to stop giving luxuries to tramps," A MODERN WINTER. FEET OF CHINESE \VUML‘N AN UPSET. questionii Fan... 0f 1‘ L.gd variety uttrtcta acl this class. 11 “rial calla rope silk in “ox-k “ill ‘ to those whc broidery. a find not at I T oblong ark end. wound tn 0rd pmi gaining hei J'wo edges no team. a bank and f with fancy s Ititrhilg fl “rial. “’11“! the stitchi find the hula ch as sold. ‘ the embroid rillow insid cord. 9, little [I rather {non aura. Quite aflmwn in d notan Will than equal“ mite attrlc illow is all 'orm. hut t1 A round around the This also I undo. A sin rover or In! Inohos in d fringed 011 forming a \n inn cloth Rad stand tags. ate. fairnlile (4 we (ht. Induce! n: U 4 add four I dlko"lrm 10". Ginger E two ind a into the 1!. at rain "R Spi tits much HOD“! won and the

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