i = 4 Or, The Curse Beet tattered | A SHADOWED PATH: GOOSGE00 Of The Family CHAPTER XII.--(Continued). "You had better wait patiently," he finished, "till we all go up to London tegether--a few months can make .no possible difference; it is not like a kil- ling disease, in which every moment is precious." And so, very unwillingly, Judith had to be patient during the entire of that summer, when the actual -troubles «f rer marred life began. She had al- ways been aware to a certain extent cf Mr. Mazingford's love of display--of his mania for effect; but somehow it never occurred: to her proud, independent spir- it that she was to become part of the show, the principal object to be set up and stared at, until she found it was even so; and then the struggling, and chafing, and enduring began--premon'- tory symptoms of the next weary bat- ike which Judith waged first against herself, but finally against him. As he might have exhibited a fine racer, or a favorile pointer, he exhibit- ed her. Habited in purple and fine lin- en, wth sparkling rings om her fingers, and~pesris circling her slender throat, she had to sit there, and be shown as the uncommonly fine wife Mr. Mazine- ford had wedded--as the handsomest woman in Wales, or in England. or anywhere, It was gall and wormwood to the haughty nature, to be hawked about from dinner to ball, from regatta to race-course; to have to show off her accomplishments," and deck out her beauty to the uttermost. "Would I had the small-pox," Lillian once heard her exciaim; and the wish came not from the lips merely, hut from the heart. At length the election was over, and Mr, Mazingford proved victorious, The last independent electors had been paid in full, the last voters made drunk, the last hundred disbursed, the last bal! given. The Honorable Lodovick Stand- ish, bea'en out of the field, had gone away threatening to unseat the popu- lar member and disfranch'se the bor- ough. The farmers (always on the Con- pervative side everywhere except in fenant-right Ireland) had yelled them- s*lves hoarse, shouting "Mazingford for ever!' there had been dinners, and speeches, and pledges, and chairing in abundance; but all was quiet again three days afler the local newspapers announced the result of the poll in bul- letins and principal columns, thus:-- BER CIOCE sks gsc 4b er nee lh RMIT cay ks a0 ee nao eee bp 857 Majority for Mazingford .... 457 "Huzza!' shouted the "incorruptibles, ' ag the Wavour Hall greys went pranc- ce ut of the town, carrying the suc- cessful caniidate along with them; and Mr. Maz ngford gratefully acknowledged the disinterested echcers, for publicity was what his soul delighted in. ~ Peace came to the Hall at last, when the autumn sheaves were again lying in the golden sunshine; when the pur- 'e heathor was blooming on : moun- ms} when {he waterfalls and streams were almost dry; when the richest col- ors of the year were falling on the changing leaves and beautifying them. "1 had hoped," said Judith then to Lillian, "that ere this you would have been able to look once again over the harvest-fiekis, at the flowers, and tie rivers, and the sky--but that could not be--ih's time next year, however, please God----" She did not finish the sentence, but Lillian Imew what she meant, and an- -. swered cheertully:-- "1 can wait, dear Judith, pailently." Waiting had made her very pale dur- ing the passing of those weary Six months. With new-born alacrity, therefore, she made all necessary preparations for tlie'r departure when Mr. Mazingtord proposed departing from Wales. A fresh Ife seemed infused into her the moment. he stated he must go up to London immediately after Christmas. She wanted to go before, but that might pot be. January was the time he had settled, and January, accordingly, it proved. "1 yeally think, Judith," he said, a couple of days before. that fixed for ther journey, "you had better leave Lil- Jian here, where she can be wheeled about the grounds, and have pure air, and be perfectly quiet. In London she would find herself very uncomfortable. What could we do with her there?" The lady of Wavour Hall listened to this speech quietly from first to last; then sho said;-- "Mie Mazingford,' do you recollect what passed between us that night when T consented t6 become your wife?' He did--yea, verily, ho had never for- gotten it, ane said so. "You remember, then, precisely what I married you for?" "Or stated you didy" he retorted, with a confemptuous sneer. "It is the same,' she answered; "for with me stating and thinking are synonymous terms; and, therefore, Mr. Mazingford, my sister goes wilh me 16 London to ke cured," "We shall sce about that," he said flercely. "Or else." pursued.Judith, "I remain here with her, and send for an oculist from town.' the first pitched but Judith sat ensued them; "Thereupon batile between down before the fortress, on her rights, }: aid compelled to surrender. She ordered her maid to unpack her trunks. She countermanded all her previous arrangements. She slid not gel into a passion, but she held reso- juily to her decision. : "you promised me," she, said to her husband, "faithfully and solemnly, that, if 1 wauld become your wife, Lillian Shoull olways remain with me, always be kindly treated, always receive every abkgalion and comfort vin your house; and, further, you promised to spare no expense in having her sight restored. My part of the compact I have fu filled; and 1 vow that, willing or unwilling, you shall perform yours." "Thdeed, madam!' What a world 6f concentraled bilter- ness he managed to fling into those two wards! "yan way carry me {0 London, if you chaase," -she said; "bul no" power-on eapih shail keep me there without her. L- have taken sland on. that point now. and for err." ! And-os «Mr Mazingford had' no "de- sire. $4 use forcd in the matter, he was a wveveverevewereeererr t444444444444444444 ¢ompelkd td give in, go far as Lillan'm\ : a London trip was concerned; but he reg- istered a vow, to the effect that one Sixpence of his money no oculist should ever receive. He thought he could beal Judith there; for the strings of the purse were in his hands, and"he defied her fo loosen them. Evening after evening guests came to their mansion in Mayfair. Mr. and Mrs. Mazingford "received" half the grand people in London, and were ¢or- dially welcomed by them in return. There was a perfect furore about the member's wife. _ Judith was sick of the continual strife in private, of the way Mr. Mazingford paraded her before the world, of the mode in which he quarreled with her when alone, of the manner he adopted towards her always. Fear for Lillian made her submit to much; but Lillian was not cured yet, and that was the bitterest bone cf contention between them. At length Judith's resolution taken. "Mr. Mazingford," she said, "you must consult an oculist, or I shall leave the house." "Well, leave it, then,". he retorted; and for once Judith was momentarily vanquished. It was but for a moment, however; for, after a pause, she in- quired ,-- "Do you, then, positively refuse to fulfil tho promise you made to me be- fore marriage?" "I refuse to lend my countenance to any cursed felly or nonsense," he re- plied, "And you will not give me money to restore my sister to sight?" "I will not. She cannot be cured, | tell you, so there is no use torment- ing about it. Besides, I am sick of the subject--so sick, that if it be ever nam- e] again, ] shall send Lillian either to Miss Ridsdale, her brother, or the poor- house." "Very well," returned Judith; and then Mr. Mazingford beheld a look in her face he had never seen previously -- @ look which she gave him frequent op- portunity of analyzing and observing in after-times. It had in it a kind of seltled contempt and immovable determination. When she drew her lips into that frigid, sar- castic smile, and settled her eyes on him with that fixed stare of disdain, he could have struck her to the earth. It was the first thing Judith discovered to have power over him. Perhaps that was the reason she afterwards treated him so freely to il; or, perhaps, which is more probable, some change took place in her character, which enab'ed her to assume at a moment's warning that look of concentrated dislike. Be this as it may, one thing is cer- tain, Judith walked straight from Mr, Mazingford's presence to her sister's chamber, and told her she meant to take her that very day to Mr. Cham- perton, then considered the first ocu- list in London, "At last!" cried Lillian; and a flush eame over her pale check, and the ea- ger arms were stretched! joyfully out towards her sister, and the sightless orbs were turned thankfully upwards. "At last! So Mr. Mazingford has con- sented, then, Judith?" "He and I have arranged matters definitely," was the somewhat evasive reply. "Ah! how kind! I wish I could g) and thank him!' cried poor Lillian, out wf the fulness of her heart. "Better that you cannot, answered her sister, drily. "Some people do nol like to be thanked." And the fixed, con- temptuous look came over Judith's face again--that dry, cold, hard expression, which it is pitiable to note on a wo- man's countenance. "But come, dar- | ling," she added, the next minute, "and let me help to get you ready," and soft- ness sto'e over her eyes and lips, as she was bent tenderly over the invalid, and tied her bonnet, and fastened her cloak, just as she had been wont to do in the eld, old days that were gone. She buttoned her sister's gloves, and then rang for an attendant to assist the cripple to Mr. Mazingford's car- riage. There had been a time when Servants were few in the home they in- habited; when landaus and barouches were luxuries undreamed of; and now it was fortunate that a magnificent footman here banging own the. steps interrupted Judith's musings. "Portman Square," she said, and the unexceptionable greys were off in a mo- ment, like the wind. All the way Lil- lian talked about her eyes--of how thankful she was, of how thankful she should be--she did not mind any pain, oh, no! und she would wait any length of time, if she found that eventually she should 'be able once agaim to read and sew, to see the streets and the houses, the flowers and shrubs, and scenery in the country, and the brilli- ant equilpages, and the pretty ladies, and the endless crowds of people in the streets. "Sight is such a blessing, Judith," she finished w.th. "It is," assented the other; "but there is to my mind a stil) greater blessing which you possess." : "What is that?" inquired Lillian. And her sister answered, "A quiet heart." It was a very touching thing to see how instantaneously Lillian's joy was turned to sadness, toeobserve how she felt about for Judith's hand, and then taking possession of it, held it sorrow- fully in her own--how. she kept eter- nally fidgeting closer and closer to her Sister's side. z "No not be grieved, my darling," said Mrs, Mazingford, at last. "I did not mean to vex you; do not be grieved for me, Lillian, for a perfectly quiet heart is a blessing that will some day or other-be enjoyed by all of us." And as she conec!uded, the carriage stop- ped at Mr. Chamberton's door. He was at home, but, like all great men, being much besieged by visitors, the ladies had to wait some time for an audience. At last, however, they were permit- ted ingress to the "presence," and found the oculist a tall, emaciated man, of about fifty or fifty-five years of age; one who Jooked at though all the flesh had twen worn off his bones by eternally Griving over the London stones. "Can she be cured?" was the straight- forward question the younger lady ad- dressed him with; and after a profes- sional examination of his patent's eyes, he answered that "she could, but that the process would be tedious." Somehow it smote on Judith's heart to seo the expression of delight which lit up her sister's face on hearing this confirmation of her dearest hopes. The cure might have been effected, or at least commenced, months previously; and, besides, it hurt her, she scarcely knew why, to seo how happy Lillian looked at the prospect of this bodily infirmity being removed. A sudden thought then occurred to her,. that if she had begged her way to London, and got Lillian into a hospi- ta', or else told some one like this ocu- list their story, and prayed him to have pity on her, she might have saved her- self a life of slavery and humiliation-- she had strength to do anything, to dare anything then; why not before her marriage?--It was but a sudden thought, a passing feeling which she put aside and conquered instantaneously, when, raising her eyes, she found Mr. Cham- erton's glance fixed curiously upon her. "Will you favor me wilh a moment's private conversation?' ste asked. And the oculist bowing asvent, they passed into a smaller apsriment together. "I need not sit down," replied Judith, in anewer to his silent offer of a chair. "1 do not wish to detain you; but mere- ly to receive answers to a few questions it might have been painful for my sis- jer to hear. Pray excuse me, if I seem abrupt. I think there is nothing like coming to the point at once." "Nothing," echced Mr. Chamberton. "First, I want to know," began Judith, "exactly what is the matter with my s:ster." 5 "Soft cataract," was the reply. "and it cam be cured?" 'tT have no doubt but it may, with care and patience." "Patience, for how long?" she asked wilh. a smile. "That depends,' he replied. . "Then you will not name a time?' said Judith, after a brief pause. "I cannot; I should orly be deceiving you, af 1-did: so." "Exactly," murmured Judith; "and now, pardon me, if niy question is un- usual, but the----" Mrs. Mazingford grew very red, as she paused, for want of a suitable ex- pression; and Mr. Chamberton colored a little also, though he took up her sen- fence and completed it kindly and frankly, for his visitor. "The cost, you mean," he said--"the usual. course, you are aware, is to charge for each separate operation.' "And----" commenced the lady once again; and once again he saved her the awkwardiness of completing her ques- tion by naming the fee he usually re- ceived, "About how many operations would Le necessary?" she inquired. "That I cannot tell," he answered, "it depends on various things; on the extent of the disease itself, om the stats of her general health, om the care with which my directions are followed, on a thousand apparent trifles that are to- tally beyond our control. If the catar- act were hard----" "Ah! 'but it is not,' interrupted Judith ---'would it had been:' then after a mo- ments silence, she added, "the opera- tions cam be performed here, | pre- sume?" "Impossible! he answered. "Ah her own residence, is indispensable. She must remain in a darkened room, and be kept perfectly quiet. Here! why it would probably cost her her life to al- tompt stvé1-a thing." - "It shall not be attempted then,' said Judith, quietly, though his words. flung a new difficully in her path. "And now, Mr. Chamberton, will you tell me, frankly, if you object to receive the pecuniary debt we shall owe you, not cn the occasion of each separate visit, but when your visils have terminated altogether." It would be hard to say whether Ju- «ith were most confused, on uttering ths foregoing point-blank sentence, or her auditor most surprised; at all events there ensued a very awkward pause; during the continuance of which, 'the lady stood with her eyes riveted on the carpet, and the oculist remained gazing at. her:-- "My usual rule is to practise eilher fx a fixed fee, or else gratuitously," he said at Jength. "But will you not break through your rule for once?" she entreated; "it would make all so much smoother for ene, I am not in the condition of a person who could ask you to give time anj skill and kindness for nothing. I can pay hereafter; but--but, there are wea sons why I cannot do so now, at least not conveniently. Surely the delay of a few months will not prove an insur- mountable 'barrier to the gratification ef my wishes--you are so rich--I am certain; you must be." "And you?" dematided Mr. Chambe:- ton, with:a half smile, as he looked tirst at her flushed, beautiful face, and plead- ing eyes, and imploring gesture, and then at her handsome dress and faSh- ionable toilette--'and you ?----' "Am rich also, if you will," hastily replied, "in one sense, not in another--rich to have, but not to giv» Do you understand the difference?' "I think I de," he answered, with a pitying look; "I think I do." "And you will accede to my request, without hearing my reasons fer mak- ing it? I will tell you if need he, but I had rather not." "I will do my best to cure your sicter on your own terms. You shall pay me what you can, when you e®an; stail we settle the matter thus?' Judith did not reply verbally, but she held out her hand, and then burst into tears. It was not a weakness she frequently indulged in; and perhaps this cuthreak of pent-up grief seemed the mio"2 ve- hement on that accunt. "Do not distress yourself," said the oculist, kindly; "I am sure we shall Le able to do something for your' sister. Do not grieve so about her, for the evil is remediable." 'It is not that," replied Judith; "oh! no, not that." He did not ask her what it was, bul he marvelled exceedingly and when she YORU 91}}eq. JXou oy} JO sutoyduAs A109} and Lillian drove away, he had abso- lutely the curiosity to go to the winr dcw to look affer their carriage. "Mrs. Mazingford!" he murmured, as he glanced at the card she had left 'n hi: hand, with an intimation that she she EFF ttt tt tot sett et ers+ Avout the Farm RHE44444444444444444+4- CONTROL OF MILK SUPPLY. Seo ++eret Since milk is so extremely variable in quality, and is s0 easily adulterated; 'since often cons derable variations are not readily detected; above all, because ths amount of milk used by any given person or family is comparatively small, 'the consumer of milk is almost wholly a' the mercy cf the producer and. deal- «1, andi-must rely for a good product wery largely upon their honor, says Frof. H. H. Wing, of Corneil Univer- sily. The State has recognized this, and to prevent imposition by unscru- pulous, people, has in various ways scught to regulate the sale of milk and like producis. The chief means used has been to establish arbilrary stand- ards of quality, and@to 'subject to fine those dealers whose goods should be found to be below the required stand- ard. The Staudards estatblisticd by various states and municipalities have varied widely, From 2.5 to 3.7 per cent. of fat, and from 11.5 to 13 per cent. of folal solids have been the minimum requircments. These stand- ards, while efficent in securing honest dealing where they are riydly enforc- €d, nevertheless may work injustice, so far as honesty of the dealer is con- cerned, under various circumstances. and may prevent the production and sale of a comparatively low quality product at a reasonable price. It would seem, therefure, that the best means of regulatng the traffic in milk wou'd be, mot to set. up an artificial standard to which al] must come, but to require each individual dea'er to g avantee his own. standard, and hold him re spon- sible if his milk were found below. In this way it would be possible to sell milk of various qualities, from Strictly skimmed to heavy cream, upon a gra- duated scale of prices, with exact jus- tice lo everyone. FARM NOTES. A great factor in the production of a great poluto crop is sufficient moisture to dissolve the plant food in the soil. When a fence is cown put it up, and then it will not get any worse. When a harness is broken, mend it before you have a runaway, or before it becomes worthless. When weeds, bugs or fungi threaten, get after them before the dam- age is done. Necessily may be the mother of in- vention, but it should never drive a man-into seling his products for less than they cost him. When buyers know that a farmer is obliged to sell, they can fix their own terms; but when the producer is not foreed into the market, he can have a voice in fixing prices. There is the difference between success and failure in this. ----e LIVE STOCK NOTES. Almost. any farmer who has horse- sense and is a good feeder, can raise draft colts at-a profit. He must be a wood feeder. A great many farmers seem to lose sight of the fact that it pays to feed colts well. Goslings 'lo not care for bread and other mixtures made for liltle chicks, but live on grass and tender weeds prin- cipally. They are very fond of young plantain, and if you have patches of it that you want killed out, make a mov- uble board pen, and keep the goslings in it, moving it each day or two to a fresh patch. When the ewes and lambs are turned cult to pasture in the 'spring and_be- gin to get a bile of young grass, then they will begin to refuse hay. Give them hay just as Jong as they will eat it. As they gradually leave off eating hay, in- erease your feed of grain a little until they begin to get a little feed of grass, and then decrease your feed of grain gradually as the grass comes up to a full feed. In this way both sheep and woukl ¢all again in a week--"Mrs. Mazingford--I wonder who she is, and what is her. history!' (To be Contnued.) lambs will keep right along growing, both in wool and mutton. 2 It seems that there is no one depart- ment of the farm where there is so much' loss easily -aveidable as in the treatment of the stock. The first blun- der is in the breeding, no particular type or plan being adhered to, but the Yarmer breeds to the animal that is handiest, or will cost the least. This is £* common that every neighborhood will furnish examples of it, and. when the services of 'a thoroughbred bull-- Short Horn, Holstein or of some other good breed--has ben offered the farmer for $2 or $3, he has deliberately' chosen a scrub at 50 cents, or a mongre] stal- lion at $8 or $10'rather than a therough- bred at $15 to $20. By us'ng thorough- bred sires we get at a very small cost the advantage of generations of good breeding, and which cost time and mon- ey that would be entirely out of the ecach of farmers of ordinary means, © RRR Ess PEN SKETCH OF EMPRESS INFORMATION ABOUT CHINA'S GREAT LEADER. The Dowager Empitess is a Physical Wreck, But Retains Brightness of Mind, _ To-day the Dowager Empress of China is a physital wreck, but her mind retains "not only its 'wonted' subt- lcty, but sprightliness® which she stil] puts into her much-admired. elegies, The Dowager Empres§ is descended in unbroken succession from the foun- der of the oldest Manchu family known lo genealogists. Her features were al- ways characteristically Tartar, Her beauty is a tradition to-day, bub' au- thenlic accounts of it show that in her veuth the Empress Dowager was tall, black-haived, large-eyed, finely formed, Such traits made her available as a third-class wife for the son of heaven, a distinction she shared with eighty other women of "about her own age. Tsi Hsu became the mother of a fine toy and thus earned promotion to the slatus ef a more or less Jawful wile. The reigning Empress failed to present her lord with a son. His Majesty ded, tte son of Tsi Hsu was the only avail- able heir, a regency undertook the gov- ernment, and at last, by a flat defiance of tradition that set all Chincse experi- ence at naught, Tsi Hsu herself un- dertook to' ru'e the country. SPANKED SON OF HEAVEN. She has done it ever since. She had married-her meek litilé son to a meek- er girl of twelve. Bub when her own power seemed assured, the source of ali of it. her son, died suddenly. In the emergency she set up Jwang-Hsu, then three years old. Tsi Hsu had to snatch the liny creature Irom his sleep end hurry with him into the Council- chamber, : Every time the nominal Sovereign wutgrew his docility he was soundly spanked, To this very day, it is hint- od, he is liable to corporal punishment whenever the state of her Imperial Ma- jesty's health warrants so much exer- tion. Indced, the wife of the son «rf heaven is said to have 'heen slapped into meekness by the Empress Dow- ager, whose authority: both in and out «af the domestic circle has always been hased upon the theory" that to spare the rod is to spoil the dynasty, ROUGED EVERY MORNING Tsi Hsu has always been extremely vain of the good looks to which her rise to power Would seem originally ic have been due. The cosmetical fa- cilities of Ker palace to-day afford an outlet for the 'beautifying energies of no less than nine young ladies of the Imperial suite, Her Majesty is roughed every morning regularly afler 'break- fast until her cheeks flame delicately against the creamy compesition with which the rest of her. face has been coated. A huge mirror is then rolled to the couch upon which the source of al! 'power :in China reclines. Tsi Hsu studies the effect of the labors of her young ladies so critically that it is said lo be necessary occasionally to rouge her twice or thrice before the technique of the operation quite realizes the im- gerial ideal. The monotony is made court gossip, and not infrequent appli- cation of her Majesty's rattan cane to sensitive surfaces. The pencilling of the eyebrows and eyelashes has had to be abandoned, 't we may. trust French sources of infor- mation, owing to the growing weak- ness of the old lady's sight. But the lips continue to be carmined. The slightly stubborn growth of hair on ehin and upper lip is dealt with after the fashion of those western artists who obliterate black eyus by the application of heavy paint. LONG FINGER-NAILS. No atfack of illness could be too se- vere to justify the slightest omission of cosmetical deatil by the several lau- <s concerned with the Empress Dow- ager's toilet. Though Tsi Hsu be s0 ul that her day must be spent in bed, she is rouged, pencilled and massaged on the flat of her back, She emerges tural." Her appearance, even in the severe stage of the recent paralytic Spell, was that of the "blooming mat- ren" in "an autumnal glory of enchant- ing womanhood," To a critical western eye, the complexion of Tsi Hsu would seem "greenish." But that coloration renders a feminine cuticle all the more seductive to the Manchu eye, Tsi Hsu being Manchu herself to the tips of her extremely long finger-nails, Her Ma- josly wears pecullarly-contrived gloves in bed, not, as has been inferred, for the beautification of her supple,;* delicate hands, but for the preservation of that unparalleled length to which her fin- ger-nails have atlaincd. The nails wi'l break at times, the phenomenon por- tending, in her Majesty's opinion, a cala- mily to the country.--Current Litera- ture, ' HAPPIEST MAN ON EARTH. Why Johann Schmid, a Swiss Villager, Makes That Claim tor Himself. - Across the front of the cottage of Johann Schmid, who lives in the village of Suhr, in the canton of Argovie, Switzerland, is the sentence, painted in large letters: "Here lives the happiest man on earth," Schmid, who is 55 years of age, said to an interviewer: "I defy you to find a happier man than myself. I have never worked, never married, » never been ill, and have never been anxious fo: the future. I eat well, drink well and sleep well. What more would you have?" When in his teens Schmid was left by his father an income of about £1 a week and a small plece of land. He built his cottage on the land and has occupied. it ever since. oO] LOOKING AFTER HIS HEALTH. "lam sorry to see you neglecting your business this way, Sinkin, They say thal you don't spend half am hour a week at your office." "Well, a fellow must look after his health, you know," "Yes, but you don't look unwell. What's the matter with you?" "My wife takes the 'Family Health Gazelte,' and she makes out that I have with complicated symptoms. of Bright's disease, liver complaint, dyspepsia, pal- pitation of the heart, inflammation of the lungs, cremation of the spleen, in- dignation of the m@sophagus, hyporto- phy of the palate, anc, besides that, I am not at all well. She insists that I must observe all the rules in the 'Ga- witte" and, you see, I've no time for anything else." DIFFICULT, It is stated that the heart of a vege- tarian beats 58 times a minute, and that of a meat ealer 75 times. Thus the meat-eating young man with a ye getarian sweetheart can see how difli- cult it is at times for "two hearts :to beat as one," ANARCHISTIC,. The anarchist respects no laws, Nor fears the hangman's rope; Perhaps he courts death thus 'because "While there is life there's soap.' Mother--"Tommy, what are you doing in the pantry?" Tommy--"Oh, just pul less tedious by song, the narration of ting a few things away!' SEEIN my me r G TOYLAND:'ON aT a - A & beh 4% OR S12 FOR am MiCKtLs DEeINCH PARLOR LI BRAR1 COMSERY, Or a a ARQUAD rut Perms atti i f ALU ABOARD 1Si1 CLOSE PLEASEN, AND STOP GIGCLING MOBILE 47 ' from her toilet looking "perfectly na----- 2 tendency to softening of the brain, - Ed ESS ee ay DONE ee I mg to th Fs 5 : 3 =e 4 14 BS ws