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Fenelon Falls Gazette, 20 Sep 1907, p. 7

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, friend. OR, A SAD LIFE” STORY W o¢o¢o+o+o¢os>o+0¢~o+ CHAPTER LX111. that he has to make his exit. events, he is gone. they get on, etc. between her and Moslem town. Every day for the last. fortnight, Jim, too, has been going, but he is not gone yet. His guns have arrived ten days ago, and his friend has expressed by post and wire his we ing the bazaars of Tunis alone. is not yet‘ gone to join that. impatient Why does he still linger in a place where, as he had justly explained to (media, there is nothing for ban to answer to the missim “,hicl do? Why indeed? It is a question that, him such long defiberauan' by night and day, by the insolence of the staring moonlight which slides in once made .his restless open eyes by night, more mm, great. spring sun 1 donkey All the an- upon under the fires of the 'at noon, he asks himself. swcr he can give is that it would be hardly friendly to choose this moment, when she is so down in the world, to leave Elizabeth. She is down in the world; there can 1:0 no mistake about that. ther, who has returned from his wan- derings, must be aware of Perhaps that is the reason why he no longer snubs her as much as he did; why he even accepts, with some sem- blance of graciousncss, those affectionate and watchful n‘iinistrations tenders him with as COIllpillly. ship is to her. her of that last prop pigeon-necked sea serve only as a nar tensity of that ache which madness of Byng has left. Some day, of course, he must leave her; hole life at. her side; and he cannot pass his w Some day soon leave her to walk alian grammar for- ist not be until ttlc plucked up her spirits. of this hit it sit and study her It lornly alone. But it mi she has a it As soon as he sees any signs occurring, he will quit Algiersuq comfortably, with the consciousness of having done a good which nobody is the worse. ' compromise at which he arri inward adviserâ€"conscience, sense, what you willâ€"th imonishing him to be gone. beth guess that her retention of the com- panion to whom she so desolately clings hangs on her remaining crushed as the first ten days cruel interviews wit!’ and son, had left her? would probably seek to ct faint revivings of cheerfulness in her in- Instead, while her velcraleiy gay spirit. Iheart is yet. at its sickest, she earnestly . The Eyngs are gone. having got off‘ l0.,f(.)-Stertthc “fly steeds 0.: queer“!!â€" Just within the time first. suggested byl ' " Sqmg O heme” that It 15 more the sick man’s mother. f 3 has to be carried Eugene Perr-ere. with Miss Le Marchant, nis progress to- wards recovery has scarcely But. after am! selfishness in her to inflict her dismal- - met list-g}??? frilcnfll; seeking rathfr .. g . . ,. ., Wiioi seem scarce r bmcc “‘5 “1mm”, less drooping than her own. 3 been so a Does he enter into her motive? . smoom 01, so fast as before; and per_,1.ol.'1t rather strike him With a species; haps his mother is right to bear him! or, ,ShOCl‘» how Sllperficml must be the?”â€" away with what seems such overhaste, “flea how on the surface “‘9 sufiqm'q‘ even though it. be on men‘s shoulders 0“ fme “‘10 9a” “Peggy begl.” “gum {.0 At a“. take a. .llllSCfllGVOuS interest in the W1» ‘dow \\'adman’s amours, and to mimic t afresh the Cockney twang of the French vicomtc’s English governess? 11- is three weeks Byngs left. liot. sunbeam is lig on board Does The hotelâ€"~of which a part of the inmates. have seen him only prostrate and bleeding, and the other and larger part have not seen him at all, but have had their curiosity wlictied by the tale of his calamilous arrival, only to have it balked by his hurried deparâ€" tureâ€"crowd into the entrance-hall, some on one pretext, some on another, most on no pretext at all, to see There are only two of the visitors whose faces cannot be seen among the good- naturedly curious and pitiful group that watch the exodus of the little party. Who shall those two spend the hour of Byng’s de- parture out of their lives? companicd the invalid to the quay to see. the last of him; has. stayed with him till the final bell warns non-passengers off the boat; has left him with all the proper requests and adjurations to let him know how the sick man bears the voyage; how But as Mrs. stands on the upper deck and watches the trail of churned water lengthening the dwindling high white town, she has a feeling that her old friend does not like her as well as hi did, and that it will never again be quite the same thing between them. The Byngs are goneâ€"have been gone a fortnightâ€"and March is here. the villa faces the bignonias have bro- ken into riotous flower, and the snowy- blossom-ed fruit-trees, that have put. on their snowy garments but lately, stand : out in bright fragility against the heavy green that never, even ceases to wrap itself about the to-day since the The weather is fine, and a filing up the painful indecision of Jim’s face, as he stands in his bedroom with an open telegram in his hand, which two hours ago was put It‘ is from his friend at Tunis. and is conceived in terms which demon- strate that the indignation of the send has got the better of his economy. contains a stringent representation of his inability any longer to dance attendance on Burgoyne’s whims, and a peremp- swer paid, to be at once that he will join him im- a of their joint abandoned. he paper in mis- doubts, rent emotions, when aughler outside him go. in“) it" sympathetically say how tory request. an informed either mediately, or that the ide excursion has been entirely lie is standing holding t crablc uncertainty, torn by in twain by conflicting the noise of voices and l the house draws him to the window. The room he has occupied since be vacated his own for Byng looks out over the hall-door, and in front of that door a small group is gatheredâ€"the vicomte, his two boys, his girl, her governess, a coalâ€"black negro who serves as kit-chenâ€" maid to the establishment, andâ€"-Eliza- beth. They are all gathered round a tiny a bourriquot as the valiant. which has evidently been brought up for sale by its Arab master. Attached to its head-gear are two long reins, and holding these reins is Miss As Jim looks out, the taking some strange freak ' ts off gal- ; and Eliza- d blonde hair fly- As she is dragged e drive, her im- borne back on of whom she Jim has ac- Byng Over , donkey, such Ta rta rin slew, iVlarchant. bourriquot, into its little brown head, so lcping at a. prodigious rate bothâ€"white gown an ing~gallops after it. a' racing pace down tli moderate laughter comes the wind to the spectator is unconscious. The latter has turned away from the window, and sat down to his writing- table, where he is scribbling a January, lovely ariness of explor- .But he hasty 1 has cost ‘ It does not take a minute to pen now that he has up his mind, nor can it be five from the moment.- of the 's start to that when the telegram is on its way to the Post Oflice in Za- nicth the port-cr's hand. The die is cast. When this is thecase after long irrcso- there must always be a sense of lution, it is re relief, and, perhaps, therefore, lief which Jim’s face, thrown down upon arms rested on the table. expresses. an see that hidden face, He has certainly beth should be unhap- hite misery had filled and yet his Since no man 0 it is impossible to 11C wish that Eliza l-ler patient w with tender pity and ruth; her laugh, sweet. and delicate as it was with all its excess of merriment, rings jarringly in his ears. of a great constancy. himself to stay with her were restored. promise handsomely. and her contradictions now. urn with her next. The vicomte’s, perhaps. Only a He must Even her fa- faet. SHE’- this py. him which she gentle an assiduiiy as in her brighter days. But he has still no great appetite for her society; and she, unresentfully divining it, gives up to him, without rcpining, the one great solace of her melancholyâ€"her mother’s it Jim were gone, the most part. of her life would be spent. alone. She tells him soâ€"tells him, with a sweet flattering smile, how much his comrade- llas he any right to rob ? It is only to him- self that the breathless clamberings up the steep short. cut to El Biar, deep and brambly as her own Devonsbire lanes, that the gazings in common and the amanth hills, can do any harm. They may put a sting into his own afler-lifeâ€"a sting that all the empty years that follow may be powerless to extract; but to her they colic to numb the in- the cured behind She is incapable lie had promised until tier spirits Well, he has kept. his He has done with her, It will be someone else’s t Whose? By-and-hye he rouses himself. part of his task is yet done. tell them that. he is going. AS he passes lass, he sees that his hair is ted by his late atti- sh hastily over it. a Bedlamitc like Byng. archant sit- the looking-g roughened and erec tude. lie passes a bru He must not look ll: finds Mr. and Mrs. Le M under the fleas-tree on the terraceâ€"- hich, at this She is reading aloud the Algerian goes along, over the ting the terrace w have to themselves. to him paragraphs out. of translating as she reach is about on a par with his stand- hour, they paper, since his F that of most Englishmen of ing. lie is lcam with an e mor on his face. hotel catâ€"a. plain and ill â€"-â€"lics, loudly purring, while he obliging- es her judiciously ' tes a wish for that relaxation. As Burgoyne remembers, Mr. Le Mar- chant had always been on very friendly 1 the beasts of the field and About the little re is such an air of content. of completeness in itself, t the idea of a third nything but an in- And yet there is a nee must be fringing its happy duality, cr own in life she has ng back in a wicker chair, xpression of placid good-hu- Across his knees the -n atu red an i m al ly scratch whenever she. indica matured thing, by This is the ves with the eommmr at. is hourly ad- Docs Eliza- tC-rins will the fowls of the air. group the of harmony, that none ca person with it in a terloping attitude. third person continually in since niche of 11- none. “Are 5 Elizabell as the new-comer draws near; rmandreis." 1'1 CO 1111 (‘0 whose presc always after those Us mother 'Sic Byng_, If she did, she mm the ms" 1‘s mother, laying down her pa- per has walked to Bic The intimate friendliness of her smile off at six o’clock tomorrow morning. as she gives him this bit. of information Iâ€"â€"-I want. to see the Escuria‘l.” I â€"â€"the matter of coursetaking for granted She had been almost garrulous about that he must be seeking her whose 50- thu little donkey, and he had wished to- Ciety he has so wholly monopolized of stop her. In that he has undoubtedly late-plants a new sting in Jim’s sore succeeded. â€" heart, and robs him for the moment of How the asphodels cover the banks on theI power to make his announcement. either hand! They have come into full She has not been gone more than ten flower since last he passed this way' Rtmfites‘â€"?tan “Hugh that bright 100k.0f tall branching stem, white blossom, and niggtlbfofiggtsfme at She 15 MISWCHDQ pinky had; here they are in thousands. “i am looking for you all,” he answers hem; , and their 5 r r _ e ' abruptly. “I came to tell you that. I am scam?ng perfume, aggnt’eioigg 338%.}? ouTltiCe-nslftf'inft) sped Thourrh he is not amid Charmâ€"fins the air. L . H (J ' r . I 3) lmkmg a: Mrs}; LC} “{amhma‘ he knows say: must come to an end, he that her ,acc as at en. Upon Mr. Le She is a- men“ . not, on, MilI‘ChtlntS» 0-“ "10 CQlllYQWa an added any more 1gffort tobd-ctainghimg traiinllilé-fi shade of ChCCI'hlfnCS-S IS Vlslblc. Mi". Le Inolhexn has every riuhl to corne and .vlanchant has ceased fllllflmfiel‘t aPDOSi' gt.- where and when heaplcases Since 11011 to the young man’s mu”ch “’“h Amelia died, to no human being is be ac- lns famlll’; but: 110113 the less 15 the countable for his actions, and yet. there young man “Ware that the father has “C” is both guilt and misery in his voice as quiesced but grudgingly in the footing 1.”... utters his pmmudc ' in which he had found Jim on his return “It has hecn- gl-Cat'good luck 1-0,. me from 111$ lOUIZ . v _ , that you have stayed so long; I know “ I'llflVC had a WIFO from my Wendy” that it is out of pure kindness that you lunisg 110 IS DCCOmlllg dangerous ‘“ have done it, and it has made all the laughing. 011, how [0r99d1§’- " difference to me. 1â€"1 am quite set up X011 are gmns 10 1111115,? SGYS“MP' again now, thanks to you' andâ€"and Le Mill‘clluul». almost COYdIauy- 10“ summer is coming on andwl shall (1 are quite right; it is a very illlel‘CSl-ing very “ven__cnpitan°y ; 1 ( 0 place. 0110 does really see the genuine She has delectcdiAvhat is indeed East there, Wit the lllongl'ol homh'pOt‘Ch pretty obviousâ€"the de-eu distress of in; 4111f has 11(91‘0- , _ , face and voice, and, in AllCl‘ habitual un- ' IS'not- 1t- l‘flltlel' till-Ciro!" a “'19 mt? the selfishness, her own thought is to re- 111101‘101'?” GSkS “10 mm The genmmy have him of any self-reproachful mis- lias gone 011L Of be? [0110» am} the sun' givings that. he is doing ought. cruel in slime out of 1181' £8.00 met”? 15 1‘ lone“ robbing her of the support of his comâ€" “. 1n\011mlilf‘y \Vlbuumt’fis 1“ bOth' panionship. In her tone is nothing but “T110 intC‘I’iOI‘? Oha 5‘05» 0f OOUFSG- the meek-est. gratitude. It is her misfor- Mw da\vdli11gl”-ITIOI‘C laughterâ€"“has tune, not her fault, that in it there is knocked'lhat on the head. I l‘l'dV-O 10L the not cheerfulness for; But, her “gentle time for that go by. We intend to run physio,” instead of curing, seems to rig over to Spain and see the Alhambra and gravatc his 111, the Escurial.” “It must come to an end some time or There is a general silence. Well, it is other!" he murmurs wretchcdly. as if done. Neilther husband or wife makes loullilnself. any effort to alter his resolution or deâ€"_ Yes 1” tain him. They do not even put any Dead Silence- questions to him as to his future pro- Below “10 Slight eminence Where they jOClS- He has nothing to do but. ya. sit, the road winds white, and upon the move himself and allow them to resume 01311131” 10W green hills on its further that happy little duet which he had disâ€" 51an What a banquet 0f C010“ 011 0118 tin-bed, steep slope the plough is driving its “The train sets off at such an uncarlh- galliiunslfgalwg‘ys‘,~31 “211011? “F “118 h will ly hour to-morrow morning-six o’clock " ’ 1 C “1 1 “pm 0 a” an n a _ . . lighter pink stains. o. tlieieaboufs, it would take three days '- . , , , . - to get there if it did notâ€"that i must put 301mm “ Squaw 0E “memes looks my things together this afternoon. I like a green velvet. handkerchief spread or I s a 1 " ,2 _ ,, , . / tus hold their riot of various verdure; 1 ,Oh’ .0: Comse’ 10131103 M“ Le Mar" while on the tiptop of everything against c iant, 1n the. easy and comfortable tone u weirdly umbluo 5k yield a Moorish of one to whom it is a matter of supreme p y ’ ‘ ‘ "11a lifts its white flank lndlftel'ence whether or not that farc- H I I - ‘ well meeting cvc-r takes place, and Mrs. HOW long have the) hom been 513mg Le Mammm says nothing at an. daily at that fair prospect. before Eliza- . bcth again speaks !â€" lle has adduced his necessary pack- “You were a very good friend to me!" ings as an excuse for leaving them; ‘ She had not. meant that past tense as though. Indeffd‘, they are neither wished an. arrow to shoot into his heart; but it for nor asked as an excuse; yet no- sticks there barbed. thing is further from his intentions than “I do not know how.” to enter at once upon that occupation. She has walked to Bicrinandr-eis. In five minutes he is walking thither too. There are a couple of roads that lead there. and of course he takes the wrong oneâ€"the same, that is, that. she had taken, so that, although he walks fast, yet, thanks to her start of him, he has reached the pretty little flower-shaded l‘rench village which, with its white church and its Ecole Communal-c, looks as it it were taken to pieces at night and put to bed in a toy-boxâ€"he has reached it, and has, moreover, traced half his homeward way, before be over- takes her. The path by which he returns is a rough Arab track, cut in low steps up the hill, each step a mass of fossil- slicllsâ€"~\vhell<, and scallop and oyster shells, whose inhabitants diedâ€"strange thought lâ€"before Adam saw Eden’s, fair light. It. is a charming road, cut, in part, through the red rock, over which the southern greenery tumbles. lie has approached quite close to her before shr- sees him. She is sitting on a camp- stool by the wayside, looking vacantly before her. Her figure is rather stooped, and her straight back bent, as if it were not worth the trouble to hold it up. Be- side her, on the ground, lie 0, ““le tin color-box and water-bottle and a drawâ€" ing-board. lle wishes, with a new pang, that he had not come upon her So suddenly. lie is afraid that this is one of the aspects of her that will stick most pertinaciously in his memory. Catching sight of him, her whole. sad, listless face lights up. “It is you! I was sure you would come. I told them to tell you where 1 had gone. I meant to skelch”â€"with a glance at her neglected implementsâ€" “but”â€"with a sighâ€"“as you see, I did not." d “Are you down on your ‘1. "7” he asks, sitting down by her side; “yo "id not seem so”â€"t-rying to harden his hen. . should not have concealments from each other, should they? They should tell one another about themselves?” “3:05.” A paiise. “I have often wishedâ€"often tried to tell you about myself; but I could not. l never could! I can tell you today; you wish, it you care to hear. Do you care ‘2“ “Do I care?” words make for the anger and agony they express to fight upon! Another long pause. passes her handkerchief over her damp forehead. begun, but it is bad to make a start." “Do not make it! do not tell me! I adjuro you not to tell me! it hurts you too much l” without telling you. Do you remember" â€"-rushing desperately into her subjectâ€"â€" Meat, that there was a great talk among us of my having my portrait. painted?” in g of his memory. “Yes. I recollect.” was.” “Yes, yes.” ’artist, and that he was to come and stay in the house to paint it?” ~ olors on memory’s surface. rying up the end of her sigh to make 1 ' ‘l' ile of )leasure. “1 war it . . A . 100m [OI a 5“ 1 '1 tmgmshed foreigner.’ " tiny bourriquot that might have been months I__]___mn away with him in twin brother to mine. Some Arab chll- (To be continued) ' dren had dressed out both him and his ‘ cart with branches of that great. yellow fennelâ€"his long ears and his little nose “fedâ€"â€" pceped out so pathetically between; ~ another child walked after barefoot, , JUST THE OPPOSITE. week, I am sure.” ,0 one?” on looking for Elizabeth?” asks If it did not take more.than a day “Not at, any answered me man with 0V0”, 1 in“ “Paul 1 Should halo ‘0 (10' the bulging brow. “Because the men “she cl‘me the appointment’â€"-seizmg this cumumber {he womefl five 0,. six opening to blurt out his news. “I am onegr CARE OF YOUNG PIGS. I 'The ~ros ct ' It IS a soft day, on which scents lie bacon fiegspcwillmbghgffofitmthiuggidé winter and spring, and that prices will rule high in this country. is the same in England, where the packers and dealers bitterly of the shortage of p are forced to handle more second-class product from outside sources than they would if the. supply of firstâ€"class were Many farmers fail to make a success of feeding fail pig-s during the Winter months, and many have 1-8 come discouraged through failure and have abandoned the other hand, not. a few have succccded satisfactorily, and made it a profitable What is the secret of their is a question others should observe and lstudy, in order that they may share in the good prices going. Probably part of the difficulty in carry- ing pigs through the winter in a grow- ing-and improving condition is due in buying the litters come too late in the “September and October are the favorrc months to have them come, as they may be kept running out- on the giound and the grass a good part of the time for two or three months, treat- iiwzrt which is (‘Ellélel'lt'lfll to the growth of bone, the development of muscle, and tl'icvlaying of the foundation of a vig- ‘ which will enable iii-em to withstand the. effects of the en- forced confinement. the COLD WEATHER IN! WINTER. Much trouble is experienced from crip- pling of pigs in winter, apparently from rheumatism, but probably from inactive livers. and imperfect digestion or de- rangement of the stomach, due to lack as exercise, and possibly from feeding. too much ‘cold, sloppy food, which, in cold weather, may well account for a sluggish circulation of the blood and consequent. inaction of the organs of the system which tibns of digesfiun and assimilation. there is reason to believe that the ail- erncnts which so often check the growth and health of pigs in winter are due to the SySLCIn of feeding above indicated why not try the system of feeding Ly which the grain is fed dry, either whole ground, and the drink given in a separate trough, to ‘be taken when rc- . We have. seen pigs thrive ad- mirany in winter in very ordinary quar- ters, fid in this way. Most of the hogs raised in the earn-growing States are fed whole corn, on the ear, or shelled and scattered on the plank platforms; and nowhere are so ,, h. ,_g . __ many so successfully raised and fitted A110. “lends real EOOd mends for market, the principal difficulty there ‘being that. the hogs, being kept in such large numbers, closely, amt are liable. to become over- hiratcd from contact and to catch colu we believe, sound doctrine tl . “cod eaten slowly, and thoroughly a 'ed and mixed with the saliva of he glands of the mouth, is lest fitted ’or being readily- digestcd, the exertion re- quired to pick up thinly scattered grain or meal in a flat-bottomed trough tends to keep up the blood circulation, and mastication is much mrre complete than in swallowing slop- In the early years of farm- ing in this country, it was the com- ng," ‘ practice to keep porkers till they ._ fifteen to eighteen months old he- foi; fattening; they were carried over the first \VllltOl'-.t11mOiSt invariably by scattering whole peas ground Itro u ghs, and were The outlook are oomplainin g has and D“! sufficient. W0 t‘k. On the business. success? f-all. orous constitution , due to snow and perform the func- qu ired. ground or on bunch together too their bodies, dicn separated. -:,.Ctlt- What a small battlefield those three the process She has taken off her hat, and now py food. “I shall be all right when I have once on the frozen floors, and given water separatelly, last. to great weights on whole pens, with water to drink, yet rlieuimitism and winter crip- was practically AN UNKNOWN .ArliilEN'l‘. wrong plank or in “It would hurt me more to let you go , fattened “at. the time you stayed with us at the . I 191mg Pigs seldom go in summer where they are allowed to run on the ground, with access to grit. and grass, and. if we cannot have summer condi- tions in winter, the best. we can do, it would appear, is to get as near as we can to it by adopting methods of trcat~ inent which aid nature to do its work, despite the handicap To this end, itis surely to experiment, of the animal he neâ€"and-musclc-formin g feeding them in the manner latcd to aid digestion and 115511 Well-cured clovrr or up fine, and fed in coinbin 1135 or sugar boots and a answer admirably. eatly re- {15 com- lticc of He knit his brows in an eager strain- “Father was wonderfully proud of me in those days; it. seems impossible to be- lieve it now”â€"with a passmg look of in- credulity at her own statementâ€"“but- he s of frost. and snow. “Do you remember all the arranging W01“! While eeds and planning as to who was to be the by supplying the n 'by providing food-s, best calcuâ€" nilation. cut. system, and Jim has put his hand up to his fore- heal as if to quicken the return of those faint and distant impressions which are coming out in stronger and stronger alfalfa hay, ail-on with put-pod mang little meal, should for this purpose, and should gr mice the cost of production, 1va red wit ii the heavy feeding of gi which is often worse the animals are knoc ance, and lose ground, insle dition and weight. file to provide a load ox , l;y forcing a recollection of her extrava- NY“; fey he wag nob an Englishman, gant gaiclyâ€"“a little while ago, when was {NO used" to laugh about him... - v r n inrr after that 'acl'ass.” . _ ' . . - . 50.1.; “:3: gouacdq’j’yin ,9” cries]. sh; mm â€"â€"adding stroke to stioke in order to S ( g' " ’ convince her of the accuracy of his re- collectionsâ€"“used to call him the ‘dis- common .pra' 'ain meals, much of than wasted when ' ’ ‘ t ‘ ’ ' . l'cd off their bal- il‘ffeholfy sléifils‘iclllnleyssl :oriflglflliilllrich’? Imgm “Did We? Yost‘smwwfl‘l remember \ ad of‘ ' “pwh‘q ;SJ.__scm.'cC1°, known, , 'WML he now that we did. \\7ell"â€"-gathering her- i: “ting ) {3 self up for a supreme effort, panting Vii 4.0.11.1 like to buy a little cart to paifffuny‘,Sntdhmm]? {£12,353 tilingfigf, “ "“ .11 cm: i- ; harness him toâ€"sucli a one as 1 saw just g:lllgl.s’[%ce_iihe cameyand he Stayed two “ow gomg along the mad’ drawn by a months, and at. me end ,of those two ing in con Cost but 11 gravel in a covered place, or ry over the coal ashes for this purpo. e, or to partially burn, some of the rough we 5 to produce charc .9 could be given ac- and sulphur a condiment, kept so the elves, may prove These are a helpful wvo to "ir- und-cr cove r od lying earth, 1 ea , around the yard to which the pig costs. A 1mixture of salt and wood ashes, as under cover in a. low, flat box, pigs can help harms the savior of life and vigor. but hints which may serve in solving the problem of su production of 'bacon to and prices of the 'lions offer- which is be the i add his 0 question? \l'm’ing ‘1 t-ll‘mt flcnnums‘leaf‘ Y0“ “’3' “They call the town you live in a we- , .. v ' ' ‘ , l t ' . . ‘9‘ 53W 31?) “1mg .50 fp‘euy ' ,, 395213.011 man’s paradise, do they?" said the man mus.t' MEI“ “1.1m m f“: mc’, Smlmg with the pointed nose. "Because the Milli“, 1L “‘1” “0L “1‘0 mom than 1" women'out-number the men five or {ix purpose ccssful winter meet the good demand At least, the sngge: ed are open to discussion, earnestly invited. first to take quota to the solution of a. present. ' Who will . A - AAAA‘AA‘AAAA-AAA-AAAAAA‘MAAAAAMAAMA -a hand in it, an!

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