Downers Grove Reporter, 12 Jul 1895, p. 6

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The i"! luv In mom“ forbidding . organization a! mum companies an” entirely of member: of one “ " and II n Ian-mic one. Re- ' till ml noun! than be That was] grateful surprise which not the Iowa school tucker who van and to I nobleman. For her man- devotion to him nie young Mn II rewarded Ivy the discovery 0.: In In no nobleman at all. We are threatened wlth a hotel bulld- lng age. Architects and engineers say the! never to thelr kmledge was there a: much projected hotel and apartment house con-traction as not. What ls the "non? It In title. that electrlc buttons, electrle cookery. electric travel. and electric action at all kinds, concentrates advantages. and helps to multiply opportunities for association. The noel-l side of life ll being aevelo oped. People want to be more together late“ of elm-d. mun. churches, elm mutton. tours. tn'vels. lec- tures. realm; of m boob, maga- dml. able, telephones, and what not, If! apt-tutu; up right and left. Two In: or pig-iron have been pur- chased by lie'bneahlre. P... author- mel for the physical culture of tramps, Bach convicted lomlst will be com- pelled to like Me houn‘ «(he nor 'clae by carrylng Ulla Iron from one end of the prlson yard to the other an- in péaaly of stoppage o! rallone. The method has nothlng to commend It but Its utter nulemncss as a producllvc factor and lls awn-anon to the tramp. The lufllctlon o! mlmy wilh~ out some compensating benefit I: the most dlebolleal of reform measures. the United Burn The nmmle ob- ject of the Invasflnllon ”your: to be M dour-flu the nature of the (mm. 3-1 nmy to restore the fertility of any tumult? own. and thus to an the lat-on (nomad- 9! dollars am “any went for fenlllters which do not use! [he necessitles a! the no" to tuck they are ”plied. We.» VII". the chill-t of the Agricultural Depart-QM. has Inmuod n me- of experiments (a determine the rel-(Iv. (mum at typical all: at my Chin-NIP. Klkmtl II hub. puma In! slowed In net» n u A-elran In" nun-d. New lb Inn hm" and I!- Jno CI... um», who '9". In (on. Io cm A: exhibition 0! their pmlnl Inc-n. mum II 0m! Mull n4 Ibo Uln- d sun: In «MOM, dllonIL It I. "holy nut the mug vlvn mid we be Qe-pud In Martino" on the Amr- ien yin. Ind at me man “no, the It! 9! taint-e yum-plug done In lhe United sum would not capture 3 mm: In England. Th new potable Hutu nu. - null luan-loollnx llalr weight“ Ml (arty-an ”mun. bid; rm to rave- luuonln nod-m manual. 0! III. In IIIII. can be moved om by IM bum In all duct-Noun. Ind I! will am $00 build: a Mann. and“; "an "ammo [any Inch-n cl on. It In mI-Mod nu an army 0! 10.000 non ecu-Opp“ I“) m. alum-dull" turn: could to an! la n "In M 1.00.,” an Wk ll. prank Inpou. 9mm 6mm mum. The Spanish authorulu In Cuba con- tinue lo sum lint the Innurmllon II pmllcally era-nod. and u the name mu to and vehement apps-la to lud- rld lot more Inn And money. It to booolm lo expect anything “In u- curlla denu- a! military movement- In Cuba. u nub" puny II mtupukuu About Iclllu {In curl mun; but uncured lolcly by the clam which no made to momma u. we unarm- lloI clouly :- l humid-bk am. In. Alva deerhiit, the divorced wife 0! Willie K., lot years hu not “dressed a menial directly, but hu employed certain person: to who from her the royal comm-nan. To [all to n cumin-n or to order anything out at 3 than in (00 much ior her nerves. On one occasion, two summer: :50, Illa Ind a list written had given to the lodge- looper u Newport or the people who wan to he admitted and those who '0" I101. .An electrical type-letting machine ha been invented in Italy by a Domlnl- can lrlnr, whlch la and to produce words In type taster than the llnolypo all: make them In metal. Personal Inventigatlon has assured the nylcultural edltor 0! one 01 our New York city dullles that the story that. watermelon: grow on water lily stem: 13 a ca'nnrd. It may not be invariably true that fins leathers make an birds, but. in the case of the parrot they certainly do make a brilliant conversationallst. Notwithstanding the evident desire at both parties to handle the liquor question carefully, the rush for drinks at. the candidate‘s expense continues. The Washington newspapers an- nounce that the capital is seething in all kinds of wickedness. 'Congress canâ€" not be blamed for it this time. “A young lady at a box party one light defined a chaperon as “one who so: out of the way whenever there was I chap around." DOWNEBS GROVE, ‘I, noun It vain be Nonnum- fie; mm to hop than B, WHITE 4‘. WILLIAMS. ILLINOIS. _ A mum Con-om The Bummeeter of Muchln. In Meeklenbnrg. he: been the recipient of e novel kind of conscience money. He bee received through the poet ten marks. or shillings. from e Inn who declares the: be contracted I debt to n public-house keeper In the town In 1887 end felled to ply it. The public- honleteeped having long been dead. the money ha been hnnded by the W to Me repentance. j M. Bourget himsefl is demeaning the discussions the book has called out He wants to know why people continue to talk about his denying grandfather: to Americans. He says he considers It nothing again“ them, that he dtdn‘t have a grandfather himself. that he in a nun of the people. who in quite min‘ fled to be known by his works without any advantages of family. It appears to Mm, he “do, that Americans might be content with tnoir good quflitin without wanting to not up n new social code. ll. Bonnet liven in n bountiful house in the mat mhionnhte corner of Paris. and receives his friends, when 1 they nail in the morning, in a rustling sill dressing gown. «mainlineâ€"A New ”do! rode. Paul Bonnet has had more then his share at American attention, although there trn't e first-clam reporter on the New York Sun who could not have written a more truthful and interesting account of the mnntry as a whole than he gives In "Outre Her." Perhaps some fine points in the anaiysia of an ”after- noon tea mind" might have been left out of Mr. Townsend‘s or Mr. Ralph's account of New York, I! either of them had been the Sun man chosen to ten the uh, but they would undoubtedly have given us a clear. historic-I. and Interesting picture. A non Neuron-o map can loud), in magical mu (In chm. In Illhh ly mauled not but cl (M Pro-MGM‘- hm. Tn up“ n adult-My hum! to um m: mutton. o! my mum:- of m (mien-Me gamer. and It in- cut: nu] nun! aunt-Hol- nu help In mph-h IN firm". The mm from o! the lxmlhe Mun-kn loom: up "value-ll, In the moonlight. us up. Wuhan!" nun-nu 1m bound nun: "he I Inhale plum murd- ‘ In the meet-Ion and vhul'mn m- alt-cl by in of Nance River. II n here “at any of the nodal Ind- !" not their Int Ian-om In bicycling. Matron!“ Bey. m Turkish gal-Mar. had several ("nun In the Wine Ll" Info" he was “no to mount Ms wheel "Kendall: Ind hop up with a hilly not computed of Roma rot. Render. 0! j the German log-Hon: Mr‘ um! Mrs.‘ Tvnton Belle, ”In Hale- Brlce. tho Japanese minister. bliss new”. the film PInncefMe. Assistant Mary of State Rockhill. Axum“! Secretary 0! the Treasury Curtis. “In Call, daughter of Samar Call. and may aunt unborn o! the fashionable net. A- no“ u Ibo nub bonus to mm on approach- to Ibo Win. In: I'Il’. um. nu» "mm-un- of flu In" not who have m Men-Io In". It I. m mall-d to u- ml! 0“. (or u van-am I» «(In eon-mm, o! [In Npuol (My. ‘ Wheat-0- An this. Ibo. Ibo Clot.- huh ”IV. 0.... Blcyclo nclul In the Whllo In! In the popular pullmo In Wuhlngton tho-a moonlight uluhu Jun mm of the Ext-calm» Hunt-Ion In I moon: and excellently not drln-ny over I gunner o! n all: wide. The Pro-Ida: and Mn. (flonlnod do not llvo lu Ibo mulch II. pineal. Rom. Una no any moved Io Iholr country home at Woodlor. 11m“- II M on Io be db- tubal by In umrlmnl o! Illa Mey- clm. and [boy have Milan amule- of the put and wallet": manned ll "no no open-alt b‘f7cl0 xfiool. no 0m. Premiu- or china Looked . uh. - Starving ncggor. A Chinaman, be he king or ‘cooile, ls devoted to his lather and moher. When either parent dies custom or- dains that the son shall resign all hon~ ore and employments to go to the an- cestral tomb and mourn there (or a long period. Mr. John Russell Young relates how the Chinese premier, Li Hung Chang, was prevented from punc- tiliously observing the custom by an imperial decree. The aged mother 0! the great Chinese statesman died, and he hurried to celebrate the rites at her grave, accompanied 6y his brother. the Viceroy at Wuchnng. Everyone was expecting the premier's resllnafion and his enforced retirement from all omciai positions. His enemies thouzlit that Li had gone linaliy, his place would be tilled by another and his pow- er be-ome a memory. Suddenly there came a decree iron: the throne com- manding Li to lay aside mourning and at the end at three months resume of- ilee. His brother was permitted to remain ‘at the tomb and do the filial reverence. The decree was without precedent; the emperor was sacred and his command supreme. Li Hung Chang returned to 'i‘ientsin, his home. When Mr. Young saw the premier‘a yacht anchored in the harbor oi Che- too he went on board to pay his re- spects. The premier looked like a starving beggar. He wore the coarsest ralment. His beard and his queue hung down from a clotted mass of hair. Lines of sorrow streaked his face. and his hands were grimy. The first man in the empire. noted for his careiulneea in raiment and cleanliness of person. appealed as tho meanest subject that he might by privation and penance do reverence to his mother's memory, ac- cording to the creed 0! his ancestors. A {our days later when hir. Young met Li at Tieutaln the beggars mein had vanished. and he was again the well- appointed nobleman. BIKING ON THE WHIT! LOT. ulal HUNG CHANG HOUR"!- In speaking shout her own work a! a lecturer and omnIur on the 'rold Mn. Catt um: "I have may in“ go: home from the ' loath. when 1 have Man an the num- "A friend of mine. who is a friend of um Anthony. told me lately that Ilsa Anthony had said that I would be the most eligible person for the pretridency. I am now chairman of the department of organization. I have worked a great deal with lies Anthony. but so have we all. I am lorry that this story has [at out, because it may create jeal- oualea. People may say that I am am- bitious and that I am trying to push myself forward, although i am mre that math is not the case. The report he. been set afloat by a friend of mlne, who no doubt means to be kind. But often one'e friends ere one'n worst ene- mies. Anyhow. the election um not take place till next February at Wash- ington, so there is plenty of time to settle upon a nominee." of characmr would make her an Ideal hem! of a. large organisation. Then she admitted, In answer to a reading question. that she had heard It whis- pered not she was to be the president. but that It had been entirely Infor- mally. Bud she: The determination with which Mrs. Cut «H Ml: suggested that Mr (um "an snarl-Hun." who [inland as (M trim was ushered Into her pardon "I have n0! horn oMrIally told a! It am! I ON! not knn' that ”In: Anthony in- tended to mm. H In rather prullnr "In the new! show"! beam-nt- pumlc tw- forc It nachos mo." "I do not knuv any-think shout being nude prenldcnl of the Woman's 8n!- A pleasant-looking woman. wlth clout-cut tenure- and light brown. wavy halt. In Mrs. Can. She has elo. quent blue eyes. ma! seem almost black In Iomé of her daunting moods. when Ihe becomes lntereued In het subject. which Ihl' I: sure to do when um aubjwl A. woman suffrage. (New York Correspondence.) RS. C A R R l E Chapman Catt is to be the next presi- dent ot the Nation- al American Wom- an's Suflmge asso- ciation. She willluc- ceed Susan '3. An- than}, who hag» p president since i82 and who was in turn the successor of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton when that lady retired after holding the position since the lormation of the association twenty-i live years before. Mrs. Catt lives in a‘ beautiful country home on Bay Thirty- flrst street. Bensonhurst by the Sea. That is where she is to be found in the summer, but in the winter ahe ls away . 200d part at the time lecturing on the cause to which she devotes her lite â€"-the emancipation of women from the thraidom oi‘ nonvoting obscurity. She travels from the Atlantic to the Pa cine. and from Lake Superior to the Gui! of Mexico. and her name is known wherever woman suffrage is npoken or. CARRIE CHA PMAN CA". Hel- Presidential noon Launched New Yukâ€"8h. I. supported Elli-bath C-dy Stantonâ€"Lemur. Equal Sufln‘o. IS YOUNG AND TRIED. MRS. CARRIE CAT'I‘ MAY BUC- CEED SUSAN B. ANTHONY. FI'SAN B. ANTHONY. Recruits are not admitted [mo the ; lnfmtry regiment: of the English army » under 5 not Q Inches In stature and a I girth Hound the chest of no! less than L thmy-four "when with the arms ruined ! than an head. "Women are such conIounded fools! Then, :gain. look at the art galleries and museums here In New York that are ”army "an6 up on Sundays. Why. they are trying tn amp bicycle riding (m Sundays. and n In a wonder they al- low the parts to hp open on that day. Well. you know how hat H was inst Sunday. My daughter and I rode about Central park 1m 11 o‘cimk at night." "1 want ln open women’s «yrs if f can. Women are hammred by thoir re- ilglous views and blinded to many ob- ? rlous truths bee-use lhry urn afraid of being irreverent. And 19!, does it not seem absurd that the great God of all men worlds should give us thls llttle book. thin bible. with all it. (mills and inconsistencies. and call It His lnsplred wart? It needs revision lndretl. I be- lleve in freedom of thought Mid of action lor women as wall as for men. Just look at ihme foolish women who tried to have the Columblan oxposiuon at Chicago closed on Sunday. I work“! for four your: to have It own on Sunday. so that the many who could not go during the week should have an opportunlty to are tin great exposition. Talking mum-r about her “Woman's Bible." Mrs Stanton said: In em- Hne o! mmmnn sense. “'nmon need more mmmnn senor. philnsnphy. and «knee in the «mining of their minds and less rolmnns fannuckm. I am trying to analyte magmas that new! explanation and to rnmkr thorn clear in the woman whom I 011300! «in Had my book It Inx'nlvas much ram!- lng and study. and I am always emâ€" plnyod In sump way at other." "\Vhat? (fire up all work? [2‘ Km indeed: I writ» for [M nawflmpors right akmg when l have any'hlng in my. and I am busy on my ‘Womn‘s Bahia] (hat I hope In finish homu- I Me. What u the “\Voman‘s BSMN" Why. It Is a oommontnry an (hp mm» In Murat to a mxxnutm that she had no! glvon up all work yet Mn Stanton “M In a surpflsod lone: {slung fun urouml Mr now-l and shun!- dors and a 17M" 1m: that-L sm- was "be Inn-mallow of lovely old an. a!- mofl without anything old about hr.- Oxwpl her years and h" wealth hf «‘1- \'-ry white halt arranged in row: n! mu curls. of When Mn. Stanton was seen in her pretty home in lhll city she was In a pleasant mood (but that she always l5). and she entered into conversation with the writer willingly. She said she was very. very busy, but she did not show it In her manner. She was deliberate In her uneven and then- was a sparkle in her eye that reflected the good nature within. She is the kind of woman that Would matte nervuu- people target their hurry and become almmt as cami'mmd as herself. If she was ever ulflll'lt‘d with the nervoul hurry that I! Chara?- teristir (-1 Americans. and parllrulai‘b’ a! Nrw Yorkers, Ihe han got entinly ou-r it. In her whitt- cotton aummur I'l’il PWI'. Mn. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Is to- day one o! the moat remarkable wom- en In the world. She Is In her elghtleth year. but In an vigorous In mlnd and almout as much so In body as If she were 30. She was the pioneer In the woman's suffrage cause and Is sun working for It. She was the first presi- dent of the aamlatlon and It was through her eflorts that It was formed. 1 Mrs. Catt Is a young woman. She ‘ was born In Rlpon. Wls., and wag edu- cated at the State Industrlal College of Iowa. going from that lnsmutlon lnto the study and practice of law. She has spent most of her time of late years between Callfornla and Washington, D. (3., but her husband's bualness. that of ch‘ll engineer. requires him to be In New York, and she has pracucally set- tled duwn In her present home. She ls a. charming talker, In the parlor as well no on the platform. and her eloquence has done a great deal (or the cause or women. In that she does not make ene- mlea of the men. but rather enlists them 9;: her side by her ptrsuaslve manner. 3nd wring. We have Just completed our Iprlns work of canvassing and or- ganizing there and we are much plea-ed with what we have accomplished. In the run we shall go to the southwest and push woman's suffrage wlth all the energy and determination that we can muster." lam to - with I berlhu of sun hcc v.--“ a . Very pretty doylies are made of fine Japanese llnen edged with rope stitch. Cut the shape of diflerent leaves, the edge may be In green wash silk. Or they may he cut to simulate a rose and the edge worked In pink to form petals. Or decorate with a border to reare- Iu-a: an «nun-nag rumor «ml 1-H: ends. Or they may he made of the sheet-eat linen and decorated with in- dellhie Ink and a pen to form my art of «mint dutch. I "The powers Oxvrrisu) M the enu- jnren over their tribes is urv gwat. -nnd "my know that thv misnonnrics ; mm. to hm): It. When an Int“. :1 (col; ‘ nn inspiratton or lnrltnmion whatnvnr It may ho, to her-3m a mrjnror. ho gm through a singular roursp rt train- ing. He will sit atom for Mann rt night on the summit of m» mm. talk- ing to the otoudx. and flattening to the windx During the day-limo hr ls N" err-10d In a cave. An air of mx‘stvry surrounds his life and mcwmr-me. ll» stun-vs htmsei! almost to death. Months after amnting himwit‘ he I comes back. Then he is a conjurer.” 5 Pollen-Inn Baker 1- firm E Henry Prahe. 13 years old. of New- ;ark. N. J.. was seized with (ramps [the other evening while bathing in the Morris Canal, near Plane street bridge. Policeman Baker. of the See- onrl precinct. heard the cries of the iad's mmpanions and ran to the srene. The boy had sunk before the policeman reached the towpnth. The. policeman plunged in and dived three times be- fore he secured the iad's body. Baker got a barrel and rolled the boy on it until he freed him of water. Then he worked to Induce respiration and kept up his elm-ts until an doctor arrived; Two hours were spent on the boy and his lire was sued. Baker will be awarded a gold medsi for bravery by the Commissioners. 3-3.".4. NY‘IEE'II-ofsaa I'. MONG THE CREE and Salteaux 1n- dians the ndmlnls- tration of deadly poisons has been reduced to an ex- act science. These tribes never so on the war-path. They have not learned the uses of scalp- ing knlte and toma- hawk. Such :1 thing on shooting from ambush never occurs. When a Cree or Saltenux Indian wants to dispose of an enemy or rival. he consults the conâ€" jurer of the tribe, and that individual deals out poisons that are not known in any other place on earth. These poisons battle the most skillful doctors and chemists. The poisons are brewed in the most mysterious manner by the old conjurere or the tribes. That is the forests alone, and come back to their wigwams with strange herbs and barks. which are converted into liquids that work terrible execution among the bucks singled out tor death. No rem- edy has ever been found to operate against these drugs. Death invariably follows. sometimes swiftly and with nwtul agony but more frequently after the lapse of months of terrible sauer- ing. "Fourteen braves have been sent to the good Irappinx grounds by [his hand." sold the old conjurtr. One of our misulonnries tells a thrli int; story 0! his life among the garages. lie is a man of powerful physique and athletic pro- portion». “I lived with two at the I tribes so long that they null me their little brother." he said. "They are .t powerful row. Tin- nlcu are large and wry strong. )i,‘ \wrk on It mie- sloulur)‘ I‘fll in a country about urn-n hundred to our liloummi lhllt‘I north ‘ ni \t'lnnlnm. The llllv tint n-nurnlfll l the lu'liam iron: the Hrq'.“l.luitx in not i nmrlwd. and, while ul:«~::' huntlnu iurmmvle IN on: [w hm." in Ilumt' ' plow-l. tho t‘llllomn or the Maple are ~ wry «mun-m. The H." .md “at- 1 Iran indium are not l:lmth.rur, lmt 1mm lllrll’ lfllrr or rul- I. .i.nuw»t their chief occupation. They go into‘ l l cfv'ulh. mon- l-‘rrlhle t'ur. 1! v? innit-hut ' . ln the u‘nlping-knilr t-r t.lut..ln.r.t'h, :nunlln the \lrtim. lei.’ linuil'WlI" 0| l patrons l- cattnnrdlunn l um mum l \ltitnll oi the- dumtlr dvup admluln ; lrral h)‘ old conjure". oral «:u'lm: In) I Int-nit iraru‘ rr-ldrnu with Ifll' lrlhn. i hml i'runvnt occasion to do rnmr urn ice to the ”dime. tc.‘ i \ms dm‘lor. ma‘lnlratc. prmrhnr. uni trnvhrr ior them. Rome at their pal-ans operate in a most myotrrtom mono". One at f the «iron in rommon mm than I first on! among the ln-llsm rauwd urrnt porn to appear on the to" and body 'ot the Halo». No matter what non-(m .ot the your this patron "a gaunt tin ,rttrrtn no" not visihln nnhl spring 5 Thrn the tom would nmwar All" 2 ; while the» porn would appvrrml; dry- ' up and ruin would take thrir him“ When the” waters dropped off, Irv-at traits of hnir sprung tram the nor" , Thu: death toltourcd. flit-int": nrr the only means of travel in that muntr, The lndlono are remarkable runners, nnd pride themselves on thvir PO‘W"?! of endurance in that line, it an MA dian in no unfortunate a.- to arm- the Int, 0! a rival mnncr he is urr an: to not A dose of poison. Thr- drugs given In such macs arr mm“; as my!» various in their cite": as thew ad- ministered where death h to I» prov (lured Some of three drop; paralyze the logs of the runners: Int have no turthrr alert. Other .Ivaza: merely rtltfcn the limbs. flvmzul to n lll‘h Desi-ea. Especially In the An- of the l'olloner-Tho Mcdh‘lue Mam “'Ielrls a 3":th 3n- uuencc Among Them. CREE AND SALTEAUX. .mz<_nz. ZEWPmHB IIFKOZ “IF k0 WEOFMDU metal In. Dayna; bu ,‘ZL am an Iowa or Derkeley Springs. W. Va. .. was laid out. three elm: were planted by Gen. Washington. one of them an“ flourishes on the unme- npot, which ll now a put of WW ton "reel. Some oil-diggers In Sharldan. Ind‘. thought for a few minutes they had struck an Immense flow of on. Sudden- ly a volunm of fluid spur-ted 159 In: high. but It proved to be may wnw. A scene of bluphemy was recently wlmesmd at a socialism: banquet In Paris. A pig was placed In a coflln. an! over It were sung ”reverent song: in- tended to ridicule religion. A thrifty keeper In the Pore In Chaise Cemetery, Paris. was recently dlmlanod‘ far too much enter-wisp. He had adderr to his income by raisin: vegetables on- the graves. The largest nugget of grad «war seen was found In 1872. In the Hm End “me. New South Wales. It weighed «0‘ pounds, and Its value was 8168.000. In every school In Paris (hm-e is a res- tnurant where free meals are served to the children who are too poor to pay {or (ham. It Is mtimatad that the tnta! nmmmt nf 30M In circulation thrnuxhout the world I! about 85.35QM.Mâ€"â€"loss than 1.000 tons. On a road kadlng tn A (”Mm-Ito come. trry thorn la n salnon whlnh displays» a sign with these words: "Funeral Par- ties a Speflalty." In Lapland (ht mn an‘l wammv virus oxartly alike. with tanks, belted at the waist. and tlkhl hrv-rrhr!_ The W”) of tho mmmnn gn rdm-splder ls k0 llne that 30,000 of (ham. laid ride by side. would nut cover an inch In wlrlth. ”arse-meat was used in 011*th. as a mmnlar mm. by the dd missionarins. from ISA? h IF“. A gmmr In Sandusky. Ohin. sells cm by "In writ. Iirn. lMVld lec I'Pt't'uily died ill Lilwny. ind. 8hr livmi alone. her only attendants hâ€"Ing n mmlson and a mu» hinrlx-nnui-tnn dog. Mt" her «loath and the placing at her body in I make! the do; mack frantic eiioris to take a position on top of :iw coma, and alter the body had Mn placed In um nave the little pot laid down on tho ireshiy made mound. where it still re- mains. The nnlmal refuses tn eat and is continually howling its 3319!. Hr: Rude was eighty years old. "Thank you "I: amt," aha AIM. "I mm have draw"! it." The thing loaned no mid-blooded that tmybodr taught! "up! the crown and Fun". "Glad Io he of mark-a (0 you." hé said. and than he added In no In. "Tag, 1‘. N. “111'" you like?" "um nun who run! 0w chap-noun lam hr}! chars"! you loo much nun you‘d sol out...» I» door." (‘nmfl look lbn loan and “Mad lo not It In M! Inuit-cu perm. IN. II. fell on Ibo fluvial"! tabby. He stooped and pic-I'd II up. To km W"!!! um! um 0mm. a young woman. who cu by (In naiolomr. um! who had In el- derly '0... Illh Mr. mm out ho!“ hum). "G. Jun an.“ Inn: Ill- lonoy null m. rm. 0' ”M mama ('urron. (M urlor. Mood M mo mtramn In tho mmrk Tumor. .\'t~vr \‘ovk. "w oth-‘r Mum. With A party a! frtrmln hr mm mm lo" a "Mum-arm. Hum Mun. (‘. lv’. unnu- Mm. tho Is In manur Ihv mm lhv-Mvr In Hartford. "a will»; to him. An- olho‘r o! "w parIy that Ill than to mm- "so mum banal"! ('moIl - mumrr "In you”, lurk.“ M um; “lla‘l ho. ”In Blank?" “turned the bus-Inca luau Innmntly. "l [blah It. must be our of (he «flu-u or woman In bunlnrn.“ {mirage TIwn-Ilorald. "What I quiver-acting man." «In the private Iffl’flll')’. looking alter Mm. "N-n-no. thank you." Mid ho was Kama. It was just about an hour Inter that the young man came back. He entered. In a business-Ilka way. Ind the" “app“! olnmmcred ”mowing In a conluwd sort or any and named to but I: out. "(Some m," called the old man cheer- lly. “Anything lam do for you?" “My private secretary," replied the business man. "Do you lupposeâ€"" “Why, yen. possibly you might." The business man was suddenly Interested. “it‘s worth trying. anyway." "When can 1â€"" “(.‘ome back in an hour.” “Thank you, BII‘. I will." Then the business man became so in. (erected in some mental pictures that he conjured up that he torso! all about, his work {or nearly fifteen minutes. .1 _» D "But I don't want any," insisted the elderly man. “Very well, sir. I regretâ€"J’ Just then his eye tell on a smaller desk In the cot- ner, and he saw a possible opportunity to do a little buslness after all. “Might I ack who occuples that desk ?" "I will measure you for them right. here and you need not lose five minutes from your buslnesa," continued the young man, paying no attention to the Interruption. “It would only be a waqte of time," Interrupted the business man. “Pardon me." persisted the young man. “but It you will kindly look at my samplesâ€"" A In Gvkvln' In In lhcrm The young man was polite but per- listem. He invaded the 011100. hat in hand. and waited patiently until the al~ deriy man looked up from his work. “Excuse me, sir." he said.» when he saw he had the business man’s atten- tion. "1 am taking orders for trous~ ers." “Don‘t want any." said the business man, shortly. A NICHWAVMAN IN SKIRTS. !» Peril-cant Yuan: Iln Filled to Acton-mush Ill: Pun“. " FLOTSAM AND JETSAM HE MADE NO BALI.

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