Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 2 Apr 1885, p. 6

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 mm^m^ wr?!w mit '?»gi»^*«-~liMWg**^***3i^i»^^^ ' â- ss^^imimj!^' i,^m^:saei^-2,;..jtissmi^i^^rm^^ .:»;i«3essa»:.:w 5^«^f;^^l«ft!!^^*^^ 1 LOCK OF RED HAIR. CHAPTKRL i ii f 'i^ i^l •i ^â- :;l irv BO WM DM^ OW •! PastdifEs, and TMckett'i Bmrding Hoom almosl empty, the Tiilton harmg kft, with the exception of ttm bad no home •ttnwtioBa awaiting them. Among thoee remaining wero Mr. and Mn. Bnaon, an ordinary young eonple, well proTlded with the good thinga of thia life, of whioh they had a thoroagh ap- preciation Lacy Statr, a frank, xu • affected, derer girl, with an mmoal power of diaoeming ehuaeter, and a habit of apeakisg her mind plafaaly and atroDgly the only little apice of aelf- •oncelt in her nature being her oonaeiaiu- neas of the talent ahe reaUy poaaeaaed of eharacter-reading â€" no hvman counterfeit need hope to eacape her penetrating eye •nd rather aerere animadveralona. She waa eomplately nnaelfiah and a ataonch friend, and at thia time waa on a viut to Mn. Enaon, an old adioolmate. Au- oth«r viaitor who was atill staying at the hoarding-hoiue wm Miaa Hunt, a aerrons, ahy, very, plain, deaf woman of about £fty, and the last, Mr. Edgar Biehmond, « dashing, handsome, dark-monataohed young man of thirty, who enjoyed the nt- most popularity. He lad been the life and soul of the boarding-honse aU the aeaaon, and had ntade hoata of friends â€" the Enaona being prominent among these; the secret of his snoeass was that he was always In a good temper, and had a happy knack of appearing kind and thonghtf id for the eoinfort of othera. Thonghtf ol- ness, however, waa more apparent than real, though none of the boarders, with one exception, ever thought of question- ing his good intentions. A habit of his which delighted people was a way he had of appearing to thuk the most ordinary obawrationa atrikingly dever and aharp it la doubtful whether he would have underatood a really witly remark, or seen anything to ap^aud in it â€" for instance, a lady would say, **I'll take my umbreUa out with me, and then we shall be certafai to have no ndn " Biehmond at once would break into his aweet musical laugh, repeating with an appearance of the most intense enjoy- ment, 'That's really capital 'Ill take my nmbrblla out, and then there will be no rain.' I say, really, you know, that's awfully good â€" 'my umbrella out, no rainf " et-eatera; or, again, some one would remark that pouring cata and dogs did not adequately describe the rain that had fallen ia the night. This not very original obseiration would conTuUe Mr. Richmond for a few miuntes and, when he could speak, he would be heard murmuring, ** Cats and dogs didn't describe it. Awfully funoy idea, really â€" cats and dogs I" â€" and ao on. By this means, he put all his acquaint- ances on good terms with themselTos â€" an infallible method of securiog a popular position. He openly confessed that he was looking out for a rich wife but people did not think the worse ef him on that account they only regretted he had not enough of his own to enable him to follow the dictates of his own kind iieart. **1 must haye money when I marry," he said to the Ensuns almost immediate- ly he made their acquaintance. "I have, on an average, a thousand a year, which I derive from several small vineyards in France and Italy but what's that to a fellow who is fond of horses ReaUy noting t" 'He always took care that this should be distinctly understood whenever he made new friends, especially when, as in the case of the Ensons, any unmarried ladies were of the party. He was not a flirt and, having a saperlative notion of his own irresistible qualities, he thought it only fair to the nnmoneyed young ladies that hb intentions should be plainly understood. As to his unselfish good- nature, take the following instance During his stay, a young fellow of aeventeen, sent alone by his parents to Trickett's, met with an accident, and aprained his ankle so severely that he was unable tc move off the sofa for nearly a week. His only resource, in these cir- enmstanees, was chess. Richmond hsp- pened to be the one other chess-player ataying in the bonae. The firat day young Orant was laid up, there waa an mceacant downoour of rain, making it almoBt impossible to stir out. Here was an opportunity not to be neglucted of playing the Gkiod Samaritan, and amusiog himielf at the same time. With tender aolidtude, Richmond devoted himself to Grant, arid earned his everlasting g^ti- tade. Ic waa not noticed that die next five days the young fellow lay there, weary and dull, were fine, and oonae- queutly Richmond could find better en- tertaii mint elsewhere. Then, again, a very nch exdusive couple were ataying at Tricketti'a, Xwith two moat unpleasing aUldren. Richmond made up hia mind, before the aeaaon waa over, t^t he would get an invitation to the oountry-houae and, to attain th!8 end, he paid moat aa- dduoua court to the ehlldren â€" took them out for walka and presented them with aborea of toya. Everyone thought how Und it waa of him. **PoorUttle beggars r he would aay, **B'one of you aeem to care for them." The parenta, who doted on their apoilt diildren, were eaaily wcm by tibia and, before they left, Ridunond waa tbdr in- vited gceit. Itdid|iAtooeurt3anyoneaa being aingnlar that, dire^lythe paienta hadgone, the dtiWten, whoatayM(» a week or two with the govemeaa, had no •mram ttt ItirAmtfat^' tt*tWltton. The one penon in tiM houae who waa not favoraUy im pro aaed by Edgar Bidi- m»d waa Lucy Stan. She dedated hia imperturbable good-teasper waa due, in gtwaVwaasuie, to tbe abaenoe in him of proper ptide. ** Ho dow not «ai« tHnfeanyoaa aafuor tUakaof JdiB,"aha vged in aappoit of thia tlMoiy m oonYvnalkm with Mia. Ttntw ** Thioi^ iwiTin£ in wotMj ho hM aoqqfsad a eeatainamout of tact but hia goM hneding la Boit anpetfidal, uid Ua a entime u ta are heqiwntly vulgar in tone, though he doea not murder the Qneen'a 'W!»»gi"fc in giving them ezprea- non. Bvatytfaliig about 1dm u flippant and ahrilow and thia ia eombined with an intenae aalf •appreciation that ia moat annoying. Alto^rether, he is the moat egotistiad, conceited man I have ever met I" " Ah, Lu(7, 1 dtm't see how even yon can call him conceited " refdied Mra. Enson. ' Though you appear to think poor Eigar Richmond the embodiment cf all the vices, yen should be just to him I never saw a man ao alive to his own •hortcominga he ia alwaya talking about them." ?„:.*•'""â-  i*;~-^ ** That ia one of my principal reasons for conddering him ooncdted he thinks his miserable Uttle weakneesea more in- tereating than the ooble deeds of others. Wiiat purtieularly irritates me ii his habit of crediting the whole world with every one of hia own failings, reserving for him- self alone the great virtues of truth and candor and ao, inferring that, instead of being worae, he ii very much better than mankind in general." "You can always beat me at argu- ment, Lucy but you need not think you have convinced me on that account and, at any rate, you must allow he is good- tempered, for you say the most outrage- ously rude thinga to him sometimes, and he bears it like a lamb." ** 1 do not respect him for it I should think far better of him if he turned round on me occadonally, when I tell him un- pleasant trutha." ** Well, if you are sufficiently unreason- able to object to a man because he is too gentlemanly to contradict or argue with a lady, there is an end of all further dis- cusdon, though I mus^ say you do lum great injustice. Of course nobody can be rrfect we all have our little faulta, and am sure hia are â-  all on the surface. Willie thinks, and 1 agree with him, that Edgar Richmond will settle down into a eanital huaband when he marries. I only wish you had more money." ** Why, you don't suppose that I would have him?" criedLncy, indignantly. "Not if he were a millionaire Tou surdy must know that I detest him." ** Tou certainly say so often enough," replied Mrs. Enaon, laughing. "Now don't look daggers at me â€" I believe you but you might have felt very different if he bad seemed to admire you more; and, even now, Willie thinks yon admire him much better than you care to admit. He says these violent and unreason- able expressions of dislike are often adopted to conceal the real state of people's feelings, especially in cases where the person may be dightly disappointed. So I should keep my sentiments a little more to myself if I were you, or you may be misunderstood for, you know, it really is hard to believe you object to him as much as you say he Is a man almost any girl would be glad to marry." Lucy's outspoken criLiciams annoyed her easy-going friend, who did not wish to appear wanting in discrimination, so occasionally she liked to have a little dig at her. " I think it is shameful of your husband to insinuate sucn untrue things I'll never mention Richmond's name again I" cried Lucy, boiling over with wrath and flouncing out of the room. Mrs. Enson was not deceived by this however Edgar Richmond's character was a most interesting study to Lacy, and very little encouragement would always start her on the subj ct. Miss Hunt, on the other hand, had made herself as unpopular as Richmond had become popular and, agsm, for purely social reasons. In this case also Lucy took a singular stand, for she de- clared that Mirs Hunt was by no means disagreeable " when you know her a little," and had many really noble quali- ties but she admitted she waa a most difficult person to thom. Her liking for Miss Hunt originated to some extent in a feeling of pity, for hera waa a history edculated to arouse the sympaties of a warm-hearted girl and, little by little, she had admitted Lucy into her confi- dence, having t"ken a great liking to her. To the rest of the boarders she bid been cold and diatant, dmoat to a repuluve degree. She made a slight exception howe *er in the ease of Edgar Richmond he had been only moderately polite to her, and used to ridicule her peculiarities almost before her f mo in a low tone but she had experienced ao little attention from gentlemen that very small courtedea aasumed in her eyea much more important proportipna. Her father had been a wealthy mer- chant, with a family of handaome daugh- ters, die being the one exception. She was the eldest, and had been a very beautiful diild but, at tbe age of twelve, had had an attack of smal-pox which had adtirely destroyed her beauty and render- ed her very deaf. From this time ahe waa almost oom- pletdy overlooked and neglected by her very worldly-minded parents. She waa aent to an mf ecior adiool, and came away ataixteen, having made no frienda and with no aooompliahmentB to apeak of. Her affliction and the oold tieatm«it tf her famfly had aoured her naturally ami- able temper, and teaofaen and pupib found it aodiffisult to penetrate hw barrier of reserve that at hat they gave it up in despair, and left her to hetadf Probably, had ahe been a pretty sirL tiiuiaa would httve been very diffennr^ nlua. ahe refenmad home, the aaae cnid iyatem waa flagged on. AatibeyaU grew up, her aiatan went QonBtantfy Into â- ofliety but ahe waa n«v«r taken with for their naatvia oondaot for an •!; dende carried off three of her beMitifal daten, and the other died of oonanmp- tlon ahordy after. Her father, broken- hewted, retbed from bndneaa, and bon^taneatateintheoonntry where he spent the remainder of hia daya, with hia miaerable wife and only daughter. There they lived a moat unhappy nnkvii^ life for fiftoMi years, ahowins no hoapitali^ and refuaing all invitationa. At the end of that time her father died suddenly, and her mother within a month of him, leav- ing Misa Hunt very rich, but with no frienda, except among her aervanta and Ihe cottagers on the eatate, by whom ahe waa much eateemed and oomndaerated. For many montha she remained alone in the desolate house but at laat a new dergyman came to ^e place, and hia wife, feeling for her lonely podtion, de-^ termined to make her acqndntance, in spite of all opposition. So ahe oaUed, undfr pretext of asking for aubacriptima for one of her charities. Mias Hunt re- ceived her very oddly but ahe, good aoul, would not be repulsed, but f dt it a duty to come again and again, untU ahe. succeeded in peranading her to emerge from her retinment and try to interest herself in the outer world. She often thought, in after years, how differently she would have acted, could she have had a glimpae of the future. Fai better for the poor woman to have lived and died in her gloomy house. It must have been a hard struggle to the deii, middle-aged, adf-contuned woman to emerge from her aeduaion but she made, the effort, and for the last aix or seven years had been travelling about with a maid- servant in the vain search of amusement and pleasure. She waa charitable, and gave away a good ded of money but her manner did not endear her to the redplents, ao that her good deedawere aeldom spoken of with gratitude, and people were quite unaware of the amount die thua spent. For this reaaon nobody aupposed her to be nearly as rich as ahe was, for she dressed very plainly â€" indeed shabbUy. It was a great surprise therefore to Lucy to hear, during one of their conver- saiiona together, that Miss Hunt s noome amounted to close upon ten thousand a year, and was entirely at her own dla- posal. Gking into the genend sitting-room im- mediately after. Lacy found Mrs. Enson done there, aa ahe supposed and, en- joining secrecy on her â€" Miss Hunt Iwving sdd she did not wish her wealth to be- come a topic of conversation â€" she told her what she had just learnt. Mrs. En- son waa loud in tier astonishment, and during this, Mr. Richmond appeared from behind the curtains in the bay-window, and, saying nnblushingly â€" "I could not find it in my heart to interrupt you, Mias Starr. Thimk you for a most intereating piece of news" â€" left the room. "What a disgraceful thing!" cried Lucy angrily, "the man has actually been listening. He is the meanest crea- ture I've ever seen 1" "My dear, I don't suppose he heard hdf of what you sdd. I have no doubt he was adeep when you came in. I've been here for ten minutea, and he never moved." "Well, 111 never say anything else, I don't want him to hear, without first look- ing under the sofas and tebles to see if he IS playing the spy." The next generd assembly of the oocu- pants of the house was at the hdf -past seven o'clock dinner. The dinisg.table presented rather a mournful appearance it waa very large, capable of accomodat- ing at least twenty visitors, and was not reducible. Those that remained still- re- teined the seats they had occupied during the season ;. and )n muiy casea there waa a gap of two ox thvoB o i a between the dmers. Miss Hunt was one of these iaolated ones, haviog three chairs on her right and one on her left vacant. The Ensons, Lucy, and Mr. Richmond were together at the other end, and on the op- posite side of the table. Sometimes Lucy gave up her chair, and went and aat by Miss Hunt but at laat ahe desisted, aa her doing so only seemed to cnnfnse'and worry the nervous woman, who latterly had eaten her dinner quite unnoticed, nud in complete silence^ It waa a matter of aatonlshmMit there- fore to every one, when, on this particu- hur evening, directly they went into the dining-room, Mr. Richmond, amiliog in hia most winning manner the while, add toMisaHnntâ€" **I should like to eome and sit by you tonight, if you will dlow me." **Oh, certainly," she said nervoudy, and bluahing high "but I am afraid it will be rather dull for you t Ton aee lam ao much divided from the reatof the table." "Thia ia the very reaaon I am coming," he replied, laughing. -That long am doea make the taUe look ao nnoomfor^ able I have been thinking ao fur the last week now I. cannot atand it any tonger. Don't look tragio at me, MIm Starr,' he eontinued, *f or deaerting your party. If we can't inlk tt^ther at thia distenoe quite ao oomfortabfy, we can look at eaeb other more, which ia aome- thing." Certainly Lucy Starr-a expreadon did flail for aome remark it waa petfaetlT manner, die grew etimaan, and had not " H Wi in o n d gny teaauig the ehoma. AH gnâ€"g-an ie he devoted hiaadf to hia un^ humor hdng ao hif eotJouaTa* lenrthA InnaUr^hMrlMi^ hmMf, PoortUi^ahalMd naTarheforaiab ao iQnM^fldl? Aaj oaoM to a at a nd at fll Mr. Bichaond Bade a feaanric whleh Miai finnteonUnofchav. She aakad him to Npaatik; hedsiaoinaVMidarkfy aim ahe eooid not flutdi hia moaning, and beoaaae qntte flaaterad and nnh^tpy **rm afraid lam dreadfnUy duagree- aUe to talk to. o CO bade to your frienda. I flnnnot nndeiatand what yon aay " **No, nor anybody dae," thought Lncj indignantly. That waa one of Mr. Riohmond'a jokea. He had been talkfaig a aort of heatheniah gibberish, in order to provide amnaement for the reat of the table at hia oompanion a expenae. Every one amiled, though aeverd thought it waa a little too bad. Mr. Ridimond haatenad to reassure hia companion, and dedared he had not en- joyed a dinner and conversation ao much for weeka. She redly mv not mind asking him to repeat what ahe did not catch, and he knew he apoke very india- tinctly he had often been told ao by a dear friend of hia who waa slightly deu in fact, hft had great difficult in making her hear ai ything, whereaa othera had no trouble whatever in' doing so. **It's quite a standing joke just now,' he add airly. "Kate and I often laugh about it." Then he added quietly, "Not strictly true, but balm to the afflicted aoul" ** Oh, I think you apeak very diatinct- ly I " sdd Mias Hunt earnestly. " Only tiuA once I failed to hear what yon add. After dinner AGsa Hunt went at once to her room, looking a rangely happier and brighter and BiohmondMoungpd into the drawing-aoom, where were the Enson and Lucy. "Enson, come and have a atroll and a cigar for hdf an hour, there'a a good fellow. I fed quite hoarse and worn out. Miaa Starr can you tell me a good maker of ear-trumpeta f I am afraid I ahdl have to recommend one toour intereadngfriend in a day or two." Lucy, thrilling with anger, replied im- puldvely â€" " If I could get poor Miss Hunt a pair of spectacles to enable her to aee chantcter more plainly, I would be only too delight- ed to do BO." ' Ah, I suppose that's aome aort of a dig at me 1 I don't underatand it but no doubt it ia. Don't be so severe on one of your admirers. Miss Starr it really is too bad. Come on Enaon 1 Au revoir, Lidies. We shall not be long I am earning back to teadi ^e Hunt bezique. I shall go and get aome voice- lozanges now. With tbu he left the room, laughing gaily. The two men returned in a short time and the leuKns in bezique laated until it was time for the ladies to retire* Lucy went into Mrs. Enson's room for a few minutes' chat-^an invariable cus- tom â€" and broke out with â€" "Now what do you think of your fa- vorite?' ** I think he is wonderfully good-na- tured, trying to amuse that poor stupid old womui." " Doesn't it strike you as being rather stranse that his kindness shoula only have developed since our conversation of this afternoon V ** I don't see anything peculiar about it everything must have a beginning. I am sure he acted with the most good- natured intention. Certdnly it was a little too bad of him, tdking that non- aenae to her but people with such very higi spirits do occasionally go rather too far, without meaning to be unkind. And then ahe is auch a disagreeable old thing ttias I waa not at all sorry." **Wdl,youare evidently qaite blind on the subject of Mr. Richmond. I only hope your eyea will tot be opened too suddenly/ I'd better say 'good night' now, for I feel too cross to speak plea- aantly." "" With that, Lucy left the room and pro- ceeded towards her own. She had to pass Miss Hunt's on the waw. Uaually all was quiet and dark but to-night Miaa Hunt was standing on the threahold wut- ing for her to psaa, and, to ber astonish- ment, invited her to come in for a few minutes. "I fed ao wakeful to-night, my dear. 1 am aure I ahaU npt aleep, and yet I am not unweU. Will you come in for a UttU while 1 1 want to aak your advice " Ti" iT^ °^'"7 aervice to you*, Miaa Hunt, I ^sU only be too glad,^' repUed Lucy cordially. •; Wdl. the fad) ia," die add, hedtating ai^ loofang eonfuaed, "I have be^ thinking for aome weeka patt that I muat renlenidi my wardrobe. I do not like being ao very uafaahionable and I thought perhapa you would be ao kind aa toTOine with me to ohooae aome new ':0h, certdnly !•• agreed Lu^y. with " »»TJ?? â- *«*. " But don't yS thiS itwoiddbebd!tertowait»fewweek.unta we return toLondon? The aeaaon la ahnoat SSVSJd!^ the dmp, are deddedly Miaa Himt'a aflndtive nature at onoe SSK* •* tidadight rebuff; 2? JooWng oold and hurt, ahe repliedâ€" "Oh, my dei^, if h' an3rtooubUi to oome, of oonne I can nwnage by mvMin It waa thoo^iito. of ilTto^jS^^ an BnlnteMstingtHk to yon.^"^^ *ii2S* »«»^ gwinhiaiy aony to havn ♦SS^L^iT^ wanged that the next daw grave ai aCSg hSJSd. '***H '"t IHnSBSTIllfi ITEMS. more are bdng attended kl There waa no other tp^l Thib MaMetd 7mims aaya that the tion of eoeoaiaa ia holi^ uaed b* 7 lork demtiata to raider the fi]L ' teeth m painleiii operation. ' Three deatha from hiccough have t»Ji red within a year at Chnttanoosa. 'r!M the Time$ of that dty atates, ini ^l aerlona oaaea mora are lMin0 »4.._j '*il phyaidana. qrmptom. Thar neweatroaeia the "WilUaiap^l ou Bennett," produced in EngUud. ir aaid to be of aa brilliant a crimson edill aa the Jacqueminot, the shape of « I phetoa, the aice of a Mareohal Neil ul the fragranea of La France. It ur!!!! prolific. The new paper bottlea are add to vit],| atand the action of water, wine, andiw! hoL It is thought that druggists iriHul able to fumiah them free of charge, jtal aa they provide wrapphig paper for J,| drugs. The cementing materid of m!| bottlea ia a mixture of blood, dbDmcTI dum and lime. â„¢| Engineering in China has certaigbl achieved a notable triumph in the brldnl at Lagang, over an arm of the China ^\ Thia atruoture is five milea long, built es.] tlrely of stone, haa 300 arches aerentj' feet high, the roadway ia seventy fe^ wide, and the pillars are seventy- five feet apart. It ia not generally known that nutniMi are poisonous, but Dr. Pdmer writei 1 the Jlmerican Journal of Pharmacy detail' ing the caae ot a lady who nearly died from eating a nutmeg and a half, and hi pointe out the fact t£at the toxic effecttj of the drug are described in both the N|.I tiond and United Statea DispenaatoriM,! A splendid golden eagle had been hoveti li^ over the northern half of the Isle of Wight during the last few weeks. It tuj about Osborne for aeverd days, audi Queen Victoria, obaerving it from the t» race, gave atrict orders that it shoaid notl be molested, and expreased the hope thiti it would not be killed. The bird vent] away to the eastward, and was shot, neit Byde, by some miachievoua idiot. Dan Bice, the droua down, is rnnniii; a ten-cent droua in the French quarter d New Orleana. He talka a^y of the good old daya when hia Floating Pdace waa the aenaation on the Father of Waters, and thouaanda upon thousanda of people awarmed from far and near to see Im. He gave an entertainment a few nighti ago when not 300 peraona were presest, and about one- third of dioae were p» feadond and other deadheada. Two Paria schoolboys, one aged 14 ad the other 15, fought a duel the other da;, in the Bois de Boulogne, with sharp fcilii The oombatante had their seconds on the] ground in the orthodox manner, and it I only needed the presence of a aurgeon tol make the affair complete. Unlike jnoat I of the duels which nowaday take place in I the Bois, this encounter resulted in seven I injiiries on both ddes. One boy Titl wounded in the thigh and the other anderi. the fifth rib. In the Aleithisi and Neurologist Dr,l Hughes givea a curiona inatance of thei beneficid effects which brain excitement may sometimes have in warding off di- sease. He says that "duringthe week oil the great St. Louis fire, in 1849, the rara-j ges of cholera, which up to that event 1 had reached a mortdity of over 200 a dajl out of a population of 50,000, dmoet en-f tirely ceased, so stimulathig and invigo^l ating was the exdtement of that week tol the brains and nervous systems of the' people, and the phydcal exdtation ineep-^ arable from the sudden necessity tbrovsl upon so many business men for repairis^l the sudden damage and re esteblishisg' their abruptly interrupted business,' ' Miss SartoriuB, in her book on the SoE-jj dan and Egypt, says " Every village I haa ita pigeon houses, looking like greiil mud cones, and in the evening the ovi-l era go out and call them In. Bat whentj man wante to get hold of extra pigeou,! inatead of calling them he frightens tlie| pigeona away. They do not understsniij thia, keep circling above, and swoop dowir now and then toward their houses. Otlier| pigeona, seeing thia commotion, ,. them, «nd aa aoon aa the man sees tbettij are enough lie hid«a. The whole of ^i| birda, old and new, then go into the hotwj and the man returning abuts them in- 1 Thia would be a fine business if it veit] not that all of them do the same thiDgtl and, therefore, each geta caught in m turn They know thia perfectly well, Wf no EflTptian fellah oould resist the teD?) tetion of cheating hia neighbor." There are juat now an unusud nombe^l of royal authora in the world. Amoiif| reigning aovereigna and their consorfl may be counted Queen Victoria, Klujf Oaoar II. of Sweden, Dom Luis of Portt-j gal, the Shah Nair-ed-Deen of Per«( Queen Bliuabe'h of Eoumani, Tno^l Nieolaa of Montenegro, Don Pedro II ' Bradl, and, ao it ia add. King LoniBQ^I of Bavaria; and among other litemfl rmltiea are the Imperld Crown Frio" Rudolph of Auatria, the Duke of Bdin- burgh. Prince Albert Victor, and Prin*! George of Wdea, the Princess ChriBtMl Oe Imperial Crown Prinoeaa of GermtfH Prineeaa Luden Bonaparte, and Beveffl othan. There are alio many royal artiitii I moaifliana, andprieata. There is prob»l*l however, but one royd doctor, Pof Chariealheodcne of Bavaria, at Mas!«l ia a aaxgeon-oouUat oi high repat»t»| I* "*^ • Btrange experience, i^\ eonaulting thia pdnody iEk:u'8pi«».j;! pwaa » flO-BMrk note into his band; ijjl â„¢ «aaa4af» there are some princes ^\ wodi aat \m above reodving an e^*! anaHerram. H. ♦ M^iSiSMi^tm.jh:£:im^^.

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