Monkton Times, 25 Oct 1912, p. 5

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BE rrr a =a If SSAeeeeceneeecececcece THE WEDDING Rive a S€€EEee cece €€CEEEDSPDD>>- r fell upon her tante Bergeron keep house for busy with the s knitting. The old! » who came in to her while she was tore, diagnosed her and was displeased with it. love-sick,"' said she. Especially for a mar- It is wrong to love creatures too much. with which he unded her lately mind, so that her and did not Perhaps some ig hes to him, and there was sweet, all murmuring the "same prayer in many tongues. She could not hear it clearly, aut the sound and sighs was like per of the fir-wcood when wind walks through it. She was bewildered Part of going to church unjust reproac win, after he has su had so: he can do what he li he is working, eeded in Jife, es. But while work ought to be all It ought to be work and too. T have often worked teen hours a day and enjoyed every minute. Ifa man is constant. had grown into his he was angry with want to see her._ one had been tellin and made him m a fight, and a of their murmurs SueeEsSrUL BUSINESS Me GIVE SOME Goon ADVICE To YOUNG FELLOWS. >>>>EaarT "That is bad. ried woman, any of God's and fright- Before Toinette Girard made up her mind to marry Prosper Lectere ~ ou remember the man at Abbe- ville who had such a braye heart that he was not willing to ight with 3 old friend,--before Toinette per- Weived and understood how brave Prosper was, it seemed as if she were wery much in doubt whether id not love some one else more than she loved him, whether he and _ she really were made for each other, whether, in short, she cared for him enough to give herself en- tirely to him. ly looking at.the clock, the spirit of success which is hovering over that man will soon take win away. There is no fun means having people that you know near you. Her heart fluttered with @ vague terror, and she sank into the first seat by the door. She could not see the face of the priest at the altar. him lying on the floor of little red puddle, and staring eyes, cold and re- uld he never come : FALL CARE OF THE EWRS. Trouble will come of it--voyons A flock of ewes lambs and in thin fles of conception are ap poor subjects for ma spring. No matter with white| John D. Rockefeller, Lord Strath- cona, John D. Crimmins, and Sir Thomas Lipton. Have rules and peared from busin was @ period when the timeschedule uled young and old in shop when the successful man of affairs rose at seven, breakfasted eight, was in his dictated letters until until 5 or 6 0'clook g and fly Trica' feos? just weaning h at the time, t to be very' ternity in the' how well the ay be fed just previous to e of lambing, she will not be best condition to nourish her less she is in fair con- time of mating, writes Henderson. The reason is at once apparent, aunty," answered Toin- ette, "Prosper is not God's creatures. could I love him ¢ I don't do it, can I help it?' "Tt is a malady," sighed the old woman, shaking her head malady of youth, my child, in it--and for You make an idol o ,» come home? Tn front of the store sleigh-bells jingled. It was probably some cus- knew in her heart He is mine. How oo much? Bes It does itself. A SEVERE TES?, Alfred Tennyson DeLury, M.A., Professors of Mathematics at the University of Toronto, sometimes puts extracts of poetry to a mathe- matical test. : Once he lectured on "Mathema- tical Allusion in Literature," and quoted from Hiawatha: His voice was The tinkle of the bell sounded from an infinite distance. The sound of footsteps came down the aisle. It must be some one car- rying the plate for the offering. As he advanced slowly she could hear the clink of the coins dro it. Mechanically she pu routines disap- ess life? There it was her husb But she could not go to him--he must come to her, here, that hateful old wom sounded in the hall, th ed, Prosper stood befo dition at the an. A step S ition e door open- office at nine, ten and so on, But after they had been married Six weeks there was no doubt left in her mind. He was the one man in the world for her. He satisfied her to the core--although by this time she 'knew most of his faults. Tt was not so much that she loyed him in spite of them, but she simp- ly could not imagine him changed @ny way without losing a part of him, and that idea was both in- tolerable and incredible to her. Just as he was, she clung to him and became one with hira. and you spoil him. You i Men are like th § trouble upon your man, ion't take care. God will send you a warning countersign of death." "What is that," her heart shaking wi "what do y countersign of death?' The old woman nodded her head y and leaned forward, r gnarled hand on Toin- and peering with to the girl's wild- ran to him and threw her arms around him. But he did not answer her kiss. His voice w daily through- the Strand Maga- rules and routine pparently gone. JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER. It is true there are still some who gospel of details-- in her pocket and drew out the iit- tle piece of silver and the four cop- pers that by chance were ther. When the man came near she saw that he was dressed in a white ro0e with a hood over his face. The plate was full of golden coins. out her poor little offering. man in the cow! shook his head and drew back the plate. "Tt is for the souls of the dead," he whispered, "the dead whom we have loved too much. Nothing but gold is good enough for this offer- ewe is thin when she is bred burden of growing the young strain upon her to gaining much flesh. to what is known as old shepherds. be defined as put pon highly succulent feeds previous to out the year, says "Swift of feot was Hiawatha, He could shoot an arrow And run forward © much of a allow of her This brings us flushing among Flushing may ting the ewe u and nutritious as as cold as with such fleet- "Well," he said, "I come back sooner than you expected, eh? A little surprise--like a story-book." She could not speak, her heart was beating in her thro dropped at her side. "You are fond of your bed,'"' he went on, "you rise late, and your room--it looks like mad. Perhaps you had company, That the arrow fell behind him--" cried Toinette, old fast to the thin her breast, of these is J. "Now," went on. the lecturer, ler, who gays: "on calculation it has been proved that in order to perform this feat, ohn D. Rockefel- "TI confess that I attach great im- portance to routine. every young man who intends to ness should do as I urse at a commercial at, her arms I have said before it was neces- sary to have the eye in good flesh at the mating season, the object of flushing. mysterious! succeed in busi This is just did--take a co ette's round knee A party--or a her faded eyes in I know it seems ridiculous to de- scribe a love like that, and it is cer- tainly impossible to explain it. It is not common, nor regular, nor altogether justifiable by precept and authority. Reason is against it; and the doctors of the church have always spoken severely of the in- dulgence of any human affection time verges on idolatry. But the women in the world who are --to love and to be loved" girl with an oval face, brown h quick-tempered. But she had been a queen. antidote for unhappiness. her gay manners and her skill selling. It did people good to b she was particularly glad that they were gotting just what they need- éd. A pipe of the special shape dress-pattern of the shade most be- comingsto Angelique--a brand the batter rise up like mountaifs-- v'la, voisine, c'est b'en bon ! Every- trimee. The only drawback to the happi- ness of the Lecleres was the fact that business required Prosper to G0 away for a fortnight twice a year to replenish his stock of goods. He went to Quebec or to Montreal for he had a great many kinds of things to get, and he wanted good things and good bargains, and he did not trust the commercial tray- ~ ellers, "to run around everywhere, with big wateh-chains ? You and me! But why? I can buy better myself} ~because I understand what Ab beyille wants--and I can buy cheap er." The times of his absence were | It has been found by cal shepherds that a pin in September is worth a lambing time. the ewe fed gra I do not believe in what the rule of thumb; the of business properly taught, and prepared to build upon. has had no thorou flower face. "Tt is the word," said she, "that death speaks before he crosses the threshold. He gives a sign--some- times one thing, and sometimes an- other--before he comes in. ttany have understood ut that for a long time. grandmother has told me. ways comes to one who has gone too far, to one who is like must be careful, Her cheeks flamed, her eyes filled with tears, her mouth quivered, but no words came. "Well," he continued, "'you don't say much, but you look well. suppose you had a good time while Why have you taken off your wedding-ring? When a wo- man does that, she-----"' Her face went "But this is all stammered. "There is a rin he answered pierced her heart. Shivering dumbly like a dog, palsied with pain, yet compelled by an instinct which she dared not re- sist, she drew from her finger and dropped it into I have,"' she The reason is that in in the fall has very little burden to bear in ihe shape of the growing young while in the case of the ewe lamb all the food eaten ly to nourish the foetus, inferred that if grain will make the difference in the condition of the do the same thing-- what happens. The ewe that has plenty of good nutri- tious grasses in the fall ix almost lambing time in and raise a good, lusty the reverse is true of at is not given a good Flushing is especially desirable large flocks where it js desirable to have the ewes all the same time. With many flockmasters it is eon sidered desirable to have the ewes bred as early as possible so as to 8 ready for the early , best market. : that by flushing be made to breed g on your hand,"' the ground in a voice which gh grounding, a come when his weakness will show itself. people write to me ask- e secret of my ays tell them that T thing to a love for folk in Bri weeding -ritig very white, her eyes burned, she spoke with her deepest, slowest note. "Stop, Pros fact remains that there are a few cap- able of such a passion. Capable? No, that is not the word. They are created for it. They cannot help it. It is not a virtue, it is simply a quality. Their whole being depends upon their love. They hang upon it, as a wreath hangs from a nail in the wall. If it breaks they are broken. If it holds they are happy. Other things interest them and amuse them, of course, but there is only one thing that really counts and mastery of A man playing chess or or golf must attend to de- ants to win--why must 0 in business? one ought to be able to k own books and know exactly penny how the money comes in and how it goes out. many bright, intelligent men who y knew all the facts out their own affairs. not actually know when making money on a cer tion and when they were Such business-men live in a paradise; they hate to study books and face the truth = often brilliant at a sing stroke, but they cannot ke game, simply because they in detail, and they are w tail because the its principles.'? LORD STRATHOONA. "Among the first essentials to success, in my opinion," writes the veteran Lord Strathcona, 'is that g-ring---for your! of being interested in Swear it to you ewe, grass will You must go to and this is just ry day and pray that your may be restrained,'? So Toinette, having tasted of the strange chalice of fear, went tothe church early every morning while Prosper was away and prayed that she might not love him so much as to make God jealous. dity of such a prayer never occur- She made it with child- ish simplicity, Probably it did not Prosper came she loved him more than ever. Then she went to high mass eve Sunday morning prayed for other things. After four ye As it fell there was a clang as if great bell had tolled; and she rose and ran from the stopping until she seached ner ewn room and fell on her knees be-ide her bed, sobbing as if her heart would break. The first thing that roused her was the clatter of the dishes in the kitehen. The yellow light of morn- ing filled the room. to find herself fully dressed and kneeling by the sleeping in it. missed the hour of mass. He EL LUEEL SIS EE per, you are unjust, something has made you crazy, some one has told you lies. are insulting me, you are hurting me--but I--well, I am the one that loves you always. you what has happened. Sit down there on the bed and be quiet. You have a right to know it all,--and I have the right to tell you."' Fhen she stood before him, with her right hand covering the white mark on the ring-finger, and told him the strange story of the mass for the dead who had been too much He listened with changing eyes, now full of doubt, now full of wonder and awe. "You tell it well,'"' he said, "and I have heard of such things before. But did this real] Is it true?' "As God lives it is true," she an- swered. 'I was afraid I had loved | I was afraid you g would come, | Might be dead. That was why I church, never he not do s Eg? So I will tell lamb, while I have known She wondered lamb at nearly pf LSS fb BPP fof Ge It was late, she had sep ae At another time he w to a large class of Scho cal Science men. by one student w stant tapping wi professor w the noise w hé paused and said in mitable way, gentleman tap desk--or on h Toinette was a 4voman of that rare race. To the outward view she was just a pretty French Canadian d have to run about es an hour." as lecturing ol of Practi- He was annoyed ho kept up a con- th his pencil. The aited tills:he found that as intentiOna have the lamb and, therefore It has been found the ewes they may earlier than they would otherwise, and most of them will lamb in a comparatively short period. It is well known that ewes come coming of cool probably true » palatable grass, by yetem and invigorat- a fresh flow of blood infuses into her new vigor which puts her in much the same condi- tion that she is in the advent of cool weather. Whether this is the reason or not docs not matter to the farmer if this or some pplies, he gets the , which is of vastly stretched out upon the bed. third finger was bare. All the scene in the church rush- | ed over her like a drive of logs in} the river when the jam breaks. She felt as helpless as a little child in a canoe before the downward sweep: jing flood. She did not wish to cry | out, to struggle--only to crouch r her eyes, and wait. ars there came a day rosper must go away for a There was an af- the Depart- and Fisheries, could only be arranged at Thither he must go to see lawyers, and there and eyes liké a very dark topaz. Her hands were small, but rather red and rough. Her voice wag rich and vibrant, like* the middle notes of a 'cello, but she spoke a dialect that was as rustic as a cabbage, Her science was limited to enough arithmetic to enable her to keep accounts, her art to the gift of sing- ing a very lovely contralto by ear, and her notions of history border- ed on the miraculous. She was ob- stinate, superstitious, and at times fair connected y have never studied y happen to you? in his own ini- "TI think there is a xs - ; 4&/in heat with ping his pencil on his weather, and it is that the fresh cooling the s ing the ewe by perhaps| down, and cove you too much. Whatever was comin : a « Then the force of youth and hope | tt g my weddin and love rose within her and she} Sul. leaped to her feet. said to herself, "I am a baby. It a dream--the told us 'not to be afraid of them-- | I snap my fingers at that old Ber- You can imagine was desolate. that tante Be that Toinette The draught of fear rgeron had given her grew more potent and bitter in her And the strange although she was | ignorant of it, there was apparent- | ly something true in the which the old For jealousy--that vine wit} seeds and strangling ¢ taken root in the he | have to do. After that comes dili- gence and then system. But unless nterested, first of he cannot expect I would, there eart is not in it ly handicapped in the As a young man I did not any special pleasures or f I could have in- m, because the work afforded me plen- for variety. seemed a lonely and actically cut off from Look, I will on the crucifix." She went to the wall behind the e the crucifix was hangi 1e lifted her hand to take it down. There, on the little shelf at the r stupid countersigns | feet of the wounded figure, she saw | But, my ring | 2er wedding-ring. hs Her hands tremb] it on her finger. SMILES FROM THE COURTS, "J remember th a young man is j oe canse |_had a too {all, in his work, to succeed in it. fore, say, if your h you are heavy ie day well, be- th out," said a simple heart. thing was that, Positive genius for loving. That raised jer into the first rank, and enabled 'her to bestow as much hap- piness on Prosper as if she had n stepped into the witness am the wife of a geron with he |--je m'en fricasse ! 1 flying |--my ring? reepers--had ! that's art of Prosper disinfectant." "Isn't it an insul flop-eared, bow-le asked an applica "Tt's the on] life," said a h to a magistrate "What eviden magistrate ask ght my black eye,'? ¢he "Thank yer. woman had given. t to call me a ged porcupine ?"' nt for divorce, y pleasure I have in er, in explaining his love of beer, ce have you?' the other reason a results looked for more importance. Oftentimes the means nearest at hand are the best and this is true in our particular case. dow is always at hand and vould easily be used for fall feed for the ewes. The aftermath that up in the fall m and furnishes a y highly palatable food. some clover in it so much the bet: ter, as there is no food better for ed as she put Her knees tremb- ed as she went back to Prosper and | 2 while I will look for it and find] S# beside him. Her voice tremble "Here it is--He has] p dropped it, It was a grief to them, of course, that they had no children. But this grief did not destroy, nor even di- minish, their felicity in each other ; it was like the soft shadow of a cloud passing over a landscape--the sun was still shining and the world was fair. They were too happy to be discontented. And their. for-| tunes were thriving, too, so that they were kept pretty hard at work --which, next to love, is the best dulged in the around the room in my slee Yes, I know it is contrary to all| the rules and to all the proverbs, but so it happened. | that the st as she said, Sete ea < She washed her face and smooth-| 8!ven it back to us. d her hair and wal! it might hay. dreary life, pr world, but I was alw best, and kept the opportunity always comes to the low who does his best. hard and fast rou- and T have never had ady for any job that and this sort of variety quite as good as cricket and theatre-going, or er forms of recreation young men nowadays in- Even to-day, in my 92nd year, IT am ready for work at 8.30 ry morning, and my cor- official engagements, generally keep ate at night. ternation of du- never allowing over anything, eation I need, and bustle I have deavored to avoid."' JOHN D. CRIMMINS. John D, Crimmins at tt twenty--he is now 68- in his father' and nine ye the firm. H important works in Ne elsewhere, and often It is not trueje rongest love is the most! kitchen. Jt is the lesser love, the| the love which receives more than it | gives, that lies open to the float- ing germs of mistru And so it was Prosper who} doubts whether} look b f him as much} A cou away as when he was | her gladness when he came home was not some- | thing that she put and humor him A river of shame swept over him. t seemed as if chains fell fror He drew her to him. | felt her bare arms around his ne ix : ° ; rhead ta said: "a! Her head fell ked into the} Breakfast was ready and old woman was grumbling be- cause it had been kept waiting. n his! to do my Hej vive wait ck. | which I knew back, her eves closed, | lips parted, her breath came He waited a mo- akes good growth May the Lord bless ery nutritious and head never ache !" sentenced to 10 to the judge. ye on her until Sat- said a seafaring man, re- 0 his wife, "and then she while I was on ~ . : : never h ny st_and suspic-|love-sick woman is good for had any Toy | SOft and quick. Ps t before he dared to kiss } ad. You have seen something, | MCN' deiore ~ prOG HO KIBE pets : he whispered, ' the | turned up, not that you months' hard labor "T kept an e After the death of the old bon- homme Girard, the store fell to Prosper; and "his good luck--or his | cleverness, or his habit of always | being ready for things, call it what| you will--stuck by him. Business flourished in the Bon Marche of age Abbeville. Toinette helped it by | in} ing Irishm: uy} real, of whom the vill | had much to say) might serious than it looked: whether -- ah, well, yon know, when a man be- gins to follow fool thoughts like hin pretty far astray in the wilderness. Prosper was a good fellow with ch of the prig in him. a Catholic with a P ; ment and a Gallic imagination. The thing that she sold had a charm| idolatry of Toinette with it. Consequently trade was! ter of fact, spoiled him a litt] humming, and the little wooden| house beside the store was b'en| Toinette thought o when he was loved too} of work is 'AAA ew Rape makes a very excellent food and I am very partial to it. small patch of rape summer, by this enough to make a lot of good feed. Another way is to sow ra corn at the last cultivation and turn the sheep in the corn. Msheep are turne She peered at the girl curiously, | 52 was : r oy yellow tase much, but that I loved you too lit- | and footba. cracks in drying} tle."--Henry van Dyke in Serib- | any of the oth > ag | ner's Magazine. slipped her cable the wrinkles on deepening like the and her thin lips working if they mumbled a delicious morsel | --a foretaste of the terrible. with your silly cried Toinette gayly. "TI am| Besides, I have a hea You must take care of the | store this morning. [ will stay here. | | Prosper will come home to-day." "¥rivolante," said the old wo jman, with her sharp eyes fixed on the girl's left hand, | think that? He was | ding-ring ?"' "T dropped it,"' replied Toinette, her hand quickly and g it fall under the table-cloth ; sown in the on to fool him} clay, ; whether her badin- with the commercial travellers ally with that good-look- | from Mont-| talk;" age gossips not be more, arman charged with overload- ras asked how heavy a load he had a ton,' he replied: light. staff !?' please do away with that was the remark of a man to the bench, when the conviction book was produced to show that it was his 56th appearance jn court. "In case you're asked,'? said the judge, '"'take it from me that the last letter of the alphabet, is MSs "T've learnt something to-day." re- marked the prisoner, gratefully. "The solicitor has forgotten to charge most of his counsel. 'T beg your pardon!' said the judge, in an astonished voice. "No, surely, that has never oc- NOTES OF SCIENCE. hh tt ig al) an, Flaherty personal int me employed until ] By this kind: of 9] 90} ties, and also by | myself to be hurried ytic etching is used by a| I obtain all the reer ;ReW process to produce hardened | Hurry An electrically driven mac split kindling wood is a nove The population of Jamaica creased 30 per cent. in the last d into a lot of rape and corn they may be allowed to for some time before they will in any way damage the corn. Then, too, this furnishes fine feed for the lambs after the ewes are taken out. They may be allowed to run here all fall and will live on the rape and lower blades of corn, and if the corn is not down t much they will not bother the ear. it is intended rape and corn serve purpose of pasturing the ewes and the weaned lambs it is well to plant a lot of pumpkins for feed for the lambs later in the fall, do their own of her; she made them feel that which Pierre affected--a calico | "why do you 1s your wed- | AACA DA AW es a Liberia will 1 i station with 2 | French compa Operated much like a job printing | Press is a new rapid printing ma- chine for photograph. According to recent expert esti- mates China produces almost ii: 600,000 tons of coal a year. A redhot poker will putty and make its removal around But | window panes an easy matter. London has more than 2,000 mo- tor omnibuses and the number is you go? Qld Babbler," | being increased at a rate of about ied Toinette, springing up in a} ger, "T tell you to Tired as she | '3 1 i 9e given a wireless | baking-powder which would make a tou ,900 miles radius by a . uritan tempera- |} drawing back -Was partner had, as a mat- | lettin s contracting business, ars later was head of der of many w York and employs as His opinion, success and how 2 EE, ie this double was so much that he weakly ques- tioned the reality of it, as if it were too good to be true. | he was in Ottawa e is the buil Ww ATA X She dropped it,'"' repeated the wagging head, ! what a pity! The ring that | ;not even death should take from ~she dropped it! that is a bad sign-- was: toiling | - a of separation, | with a laugh for the store, and a! er gh for the lonely house, and prayer for the church, was at 1ight, she did not sleep well | and her dreams were troubl "Who pays those men," he said,/ aunty Bergeron's All the time | old amd on the jour-) ' thoughts hobbled At an inquest the foreman of the jury remarked on the light weight q gathering and they "T have been a judge of are the best possible vermifuges, However well your fall pasture well to remember will not ¢ome therefore, on may be obtained is valuable, as interesting, made him unhappy. Meantime Toinette through the Mr. Crimmins has a great belief in order and method, and he has little use man who is careless work, forgetful of "and T ought to know what a child should weigh." A woman witness recently admit- ted that she stole a lett man's pocket while he on her knee. plained, "if yon are going must know something the worst of all, countersign of----" is it is always that a little grain amiss, and I believe it would pay every sheep owner to feed a-half pound of oats to' his sheep every fall and. winter, even though they are on Tuxuriant or respect for an-| thirty a week. g0 to the store, I am mistress in this house.' Tante Bergeron clumped sul , away, muttering, "A mistress with-| Mile speed. against} out a wedding-rin appointments, icosts a dollar to stop an ordinary lenty | Passenger train moving at a fifty- day during the about brains, courage, bab it may be taken understood that the these factors is nece: cess in most walks of "For the many years determination about him." \ defendant enc An international congress on hy- }la! There's a big misery in that."' | drology, chmatology, and genology Toinette rolled up her sleeves and will be held at Madrid in October She tried' to | of next year, | cet ee or treating goods returned by Oh, Ja-la, la-| loving woo much, In the cold drab dawn of a March morning it seemed to her as if the} washed the- dishes. | Stoney ao) ee a Nady ee os fethin ig ends Sept re eomae gato pote her| Store has installed a complete ster- lilizine plant. : e. Of Spain's 4.180 coal mines only | There are many caring for the ewes than the ones mentioned, The only point of great importance is to give good, green food and lots of it. possession of | eavored, without 0 prove that his bulldog was harmless and would not bite. other ways of | church bell had just stopped ring- | What the kind will be, every farmer can for himself, but this All extra labor - She put on her clothes | quickly and hurried out. heavy and slow to Toinette. The| was deserted. "ony | teeth by biting the ak the notes seemed A man said that he The road} throat. Y fields) the hem --_ an. has been to start 7 comptete my tasks and 'clear as quickly as possible. best decido much is certain: was willing to She wiped her eyes with -In the snow hours were doped out of the day as} the lit reluctantly as black molasses drib ; nat eS would leay ; : ; 4 h for} 29! ave officially recorded as. pro-| have the executive part isiargostiered a |, Upstairs, bare-armec » LO S@areh tor wha BR a ae about 4.000.- | aS ween OCU O part j ductive. yielding but abc ~ (finished by noon. with the ewe flocks at mating time > eourt, "and | will be repaid many times over at | black as ink. Against the esky rose The forepart of bles from a jug. Only a profession-| the "al instinct kept her up to her work! ress of refuge, in the store. She jollied the custo: mere, looked after the aecounts, made good sales, and even coquet ted enough with the commercial travellers to send them away with | out ill-will for the establishment whicl®refused to buy from them. "A. little badinage does no | 000 tons a vear, . plates beberle ts An electrie cab which is BGR riiet rit bail Saye case |favor in Berlin is a three wheeled | suena aret is i j affair with the body and seats com- | 5! : wig pletely ineclosed, he lambing period, ehurch like a fort-| She looked and felt in every cor- | ner of the room, took up the rag rugs and shook them, moved every chair and the big chest of drawers and the wash-stand, pulled the covers and the pillows and the oceupied in afternoon in planning for the anticipating where coming requirements. "Tt is essential fo nan should know h "Why is it,' asked the curious | CUshly, Suest, "'that poor men usually give ; larger tips than rich men?' AGREED WITH THE COURT. wish to make a motien,'? speaker stood a little unsteadily, looking at the judge, who ignored. him. Pausing a moment, the would. be maker of the motion sat down. He was a good lawyer and a friend of the presiding judge, but at tines But as she entered the door, in | well-known | A daughter's darkness, she saw that the church r success that a is business thor- that he have an acquain- ance with details, that he should have ambition to excel and be at SMART BOY. "You are an honest boy,"? said the lady, as she opened the roll of | blinding radiance like a mist them on the floor. Everything was blurred and finished the room looked as if the big north-west wind had passed When she had harm," she said, "it keeps people! There w from getting angry because they Yet she 7 can't do any more business as not a face to be seen. felt the presence of a vast congregation all around her. five one-dollar bills, "but the mon- a five-dollar Didn't you see that in the adver- the top, where there is al ty of room.' LIPTON'S MOTTO. he was not quite' in condition for decorous court proceedings, judge shook his head and, Then Toinette sat down on the who was something of a philosopher bed, rubbing the little white mark as well, "looks to me like de po' But in the house she was dull] were movements in the mist. and absent-minded. She went about as if she had lost something. She sat in her rocking-chair, with - her hands in-her lap, as if she were waiting for something. The yellow light of the lamp shone upon her faco oud hurt her eyes. A tear ~ on her finger where the ring had ben, and staring through the win- dow at the church as if she were All sorts of dark and forward, said sternly ; is of the opinion, Mr, ---- you are not quite yourself?' "Well, that's the frst correct opinion I've heard from this court,' he remarked with an air of eolemn approval and returned to his chair, where he remained jn itaparturable man don't want nobody to find out , and the rich man don't want nobody to find out he's rich."? rustling of silks, the breath of rich and strange perfumes, 'the shufflirte of hob-nailed shoes, the smell of the sea and of the forest, came to her There were voices of men and women. young and old, rough and delicate, hoarse "There is one motto,'? says Sir Thomas Lipton in the Se Strand, "which I would lik every young replied the boy. was a five-dollar bill that I found, but I had it changed so' that you could pay me a reward." Let every one inquire of himself what he loveth, and he shall know in his heart what sort of a man he from every side. around her. Perhaps Prosper had met with an accident, or he was sick; or perhaps the suspicions and } I always keep this motto Of course, after a man as. won the game he 'set out to Throw mid at a man and most of it falls off; throw flattery at him and it sticks.

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