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Durham Review (1897), 14 May 1908, p. 3

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osed F. RATES. 4) # e PeC C 206 CHHT, Tikk keeping an eye on the street, turned up the collar of his coat and pulled his hat over his brows. "My good Rachel," he said, youâ€"you can"t expect me at this time of night and in the open street, to stand here talking with you. We shall be seen, and "You did not mind bfll‘ seen with me two years ago, Jordan," she said, with sad reproach. "Didn‘t 1*" thought Jordan, but he said aloud: "That was very different; cirâ€" cumstances have altered, andâ€"andâ€"â€"" He saw some of the people coming from Lady Marlowe‘s comrn: up the street, and turned upon her with smothered anger. "Follow me toward t::.rrk,” and he walked away with his bent even lower than usual. The woman followed him with a weary gait which spoke of mental as well as physical weariness, and Jordan, stopping in the darkest corner he could find, turnâ€" ed and confronted her. "Now, Rachel," he said, with someâ€" thing upprueling.h'u ordinary smoothâ€" ness, "tell me what this extraordinary proceeding means." "Is it so extraordinary, Jordan?t Did you think that I should receive that letâ€" ter and do nothing; that 1 should subâ€" mit to be treated likeâ€"like a dogâ€"ah! worse; a toy you had got tired of*" e e se ie C O CEmi C 20000 "Hush, hush!" he said, for her sad voice had:grown louder, and a policeman paused in his heavy tramp and looked at them. "For heaven‘s sake, my good girl, don‘t make a scene! It can do no possible good, quite the reverse, in fact, andâ€"Confound it! you have attracted attention already. tere, take my arm. We must walk on, 1 suppose." She declined his arm with a gesture, and walked beside him, her trembling hand holding her shawl together. | J "Now, tell me all about it, and whatâ€" what you hope to effect by dogging me in this way," be said, with barely conâ€" cealed impatience "and for goodness‘ sake, speak quictly, and don‘t give way to heroies. 1 thought I had explained everything in the letter." "Ihat eruel letter!" she exclaimed, her voice trembling. "How could you write it, Jordan, remembering all that we were to each other, and so snot a time ago" "What is the use of harping on the r.“” he said, with a sudden burst of ritation, which he subdued by a palpâ€" able effort. "The past, my dear Rachel, and the present are very different things. When you and Iâ€"erâ€"erâ€"amusâ€" | ed ourselves by playing at lovers two years ago down at that infernally stuâ€" rd watering place, I was only Jordan .£n_c, the son of a man who might disâ€" l inherit me any moment, and youâ€"â€"â€"" "And I," she said, in a voice boarse | with suppressed emotion, "what was 1, Jordan _ An innocent, ignorant girl, who believed in and trusted_the man who told her that he loved her Yes, trusted, | Jordan." Sir Jordan bit his lip. "All that, as I say, was two years ago, | andâ€"and in short, the dreams you and | I induiged in cannot be realized. Great | heaven!"It was seldom Sir Jordan pert | mitted himseli to use strong language, | and his doing so on this occasion showed ' how much upset he was by this incom | venient interviewâ€""Great heaven! you | â€"you didn‘t suppose that I was going | to marry you, afterâ€"afterâ€"â€"" ‘ "After you became a rich man with a title," she finished, with a eateh in her voice, her dark eyes fixed on his face, which looked mean and sneaking at that moment, and quite unlike the intellectâ€" ual countenance which shone in the House of Commons. "Yes, Jordan, that is what I thought what you led me to think, when you promised me, with oaths that would have deceived any girl. Jorâ€" danâ€"*" she caught his armâ€""you will not be so unjust, so eruel, so heartiess, as to desert me now!" and she stood still, panting and searching his pale, downeast fuce for one faint sign of .reâ€" lenting. a He shook ber hand off.his arm. "Desert you? Certainly not," he said. "I am not eapable of suchâ€"such congluct. As I told you in my letterâ€"in which 1 am sure 1 endeavored to be explicit enough, and which I thiak you must have understood â€"â€"" & "Abh, yes," she said, with a heavy sigh. "It was easy to understand." e C s scr "Very well, th 'ointed out to y not possible that circumstances, w charity meeUnp,. * should be provided for. 1 gertain sum of mone: whi sufficient, amply -nfilx'o‘wnt \r-inâ€"-errco-kflâ€"nnd cfl. which you will allow . that some day. and before trust, you may meet with respectable man who will devoted and affeetionate w ment, please,." he continu for she had opened her qui if about to interrupt him. .you will consider the whoi * _erâ€"rational point of vi my po'&'l' toâ€"tC folly of the past that you would I in the spirit whi There is Only One ««Bromo Quining" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine Always THE USURPER Courmene T000 remem ber the fuall name. Look stozatzre on every box. 25¢. / i #Cnad W â€"would have accepted it with, if not gratitudeâ€"for I am aware, my dear Raâ€" chel, that we must not look for gratitnde in this worldâ€"at least with satisfaction. It appears, however, that my not unreaâ€" sonmable expectations _ were doomed to dinp?ointnent, and instead of aeguiel- cing in theâ€"erâ€"decrees of Providence, and falling in with my view of our mutâ€" ual obligations, you have thought fit to follow me to London, and here in the public streetaâ€"my dear Rachel, I did not deem you caapble of it!â€"to force yourâ€" self upon me andâ€"erâ€"make a scene." _ He had finished at last, and stood looking at her steadily from under his lide, am expression of mock indignation and long suffering on his pale face. But he could not meet her eyes; eyes which had grown darker with the sombre light of an injured woman‘s anguish . and scorn. he could not meet her eyes; eyes whi had grown darker with.t’he:'lo::';:e';?g‘a Before a month had passed Sylvia of an injured woman‘s anguish . and showed signs of marked improvement. scorn. She still looked rather lik‘e & e:;lt., bu; "Come .‘ he said, "1 like a colf that is well fed and care my dear Ra (,h:]‘.i' “e.: :’i]‘l’a;t.:xf:ih?ndg‘;‘ for; whereas when Nevilleâ€"or Jack, as any more harsh words. You will s'ee the he had I'Pâ€"('hrisl.ened himself â€"had bought wisdom of the step I have taken toâ€"to her she was like a colt that had been â€"â€"end our little friendship, and 1 am left to the merey of the cold winds and sure you know me be""; it bitter weather on some bleak moor. "Know you! Yes, I know you!" came !‘.ier face had. lost the wan, sorrowâ€" antingly‘ _ from her Writ,hir'ng t «q stricken expression which !md. gone so Enow you now! Oh!"â€"she mir(i Trer straight to the heart of Neville that clenched hands and l;t chem fall & a?n eyer-memorable night on which he had heavilyâ€"*"oh, that I should ever }?a“ first seen her, and ‘though at times she been deceived by you! How-â€"‘my God! was quite and thoughtful, and the gray how could I ever have believed in iou | hKe5 dark with melancholy, showed that for one single moment? Why couldn‘t 1 T Ao oril nrqprin .m n ce odter. was see that you were a devil and a monster was evident that time, the consoler, was A&nstead of a man? But I was alone in ! whand" his healing hand over that the world, and innocentâ€"no father, moâ€" wound and soothing its aching. ther. Ariend, to w d i Meth, whf,y _lmd at first merely tolerâ€" agh > warn or guard me, and | ated the girl‘s presence, and â€" scarcely She Drokefion 1 $ looked at %er without mumbling "nine K Failin own and eaned against the | hundred pounds!" got used to her and, e 'ra. '"."-'."' covering her face with her l m a way, ford of her; at any rate, she nds and ‘chakine with sobs that | was good enough to ]n-rmi! Sylvia to do uP 1 1 i uie "Know you! Yes, I know you!" came Eantingly from her writhing lips. "1 now you now! Oh!"â€"she raised ber clenched hands and let them fall again heavilyâ€""oh, that I should ever have been deceived by you! Howâ€"my God! â€"how could I ever have believed in you for one single moment? Why couldn‘t 1 see that you were a devil and a monster A&nstead of a man? But I was alone in the world, and innocentâ€"no father, moâ€" ther, friend, to warn or guard me, and She brokedlown and leaned against the park railings, covering her face with her hands and shaking with sobs that brought no relief. . J hust & CRRRARE Jordan gnawed at his under lip and looked round watchfully. "Come, come, my dear Rachel," he said, soothingly. "Permit me to say that you take too black a view ofâ€"of the case. _ Now let us be more cheerful. Your future, as I have pointed out, is wrovide for. â€" The money I have offerâ€" srid, 80 that yo the case Your f1 pr t} would touch it â€"that penny ? _ XNo, not i You offer me mon« you don‘t know what are driving a broken perate! . Desperate! vou hear? Do y once And who have me. men Look work white spair had bod me wai which God shall striRE PM MUOC! tween you and me. The hou come!*â€"she struck her breastâ€"" come, sneer as you may." Jorda not sneering, he was far too unco! able to manage a sneet. "And wh does come, I will show you as mercy and pity as you have this shown me." WeR CCC She looked at him full in the eyes, her face distorted by the convicting emoâ€" tionsâ€"despair, resontment, humiliation _ which tortured her; then, dragging the shaw! round her, turned and left him. Before she had gone many yards he saw her stagger and fall against the railâ€" ince by which she supported herself by inge, uy MAmemmeny CoRmen oo cuarlls P one hand. Sir Jordan Lynne did not go to her asâ€" «istance, but waited until she had recovâ€" ered and moved on again; then, he, too, turned on his way home. He was very much annoyed; _ very much upset, indeed. He bhad actually ofâ€" fered this foolish young creature, who reslly had noâ€"no claim upon him, fifty *.0 0 ©5s a vear. and she bad treated him thus. It was quite an agitated face upon which the policeman who had ‘been watchâ€" ing the interview from the corner, turnâ€" ed Wis lantern. Fie recognized Sir Jordan and «aluted him, and Sir Jordan smoothâ€" ed the harassed Tmes from his face and acknowledged the salute graciously. "Hope that young woman ha«n‘t been annoving you, sir." said the constable. "Xo, mo* replied Jordan. "She is a penâ€" s10ner + betrayed and deserted! Jordan; look weli at me iber what I was. I‘ve b â€" own lips often enoughâ€"t ‘â€"that I was pretty â€"â€" k at me now; look at Y L " She drew the shaw! unds a year, twlt twlt his under lip and The hour will reastâ€""it will ." Jordan was too uncomfortâ€" "And when it ; you as much have this night first seen Ner, ABG PMUUR® M 2 l3 0 ancanr was quite and thoughtful, and the gray eyes, dark with melancholy, showed that she was thinking of her head father, it was evident that time, the consoler, was passing his healing band over _ that wound and soothing its aching. Meth, who had at first merely tolerâ€". ated the girl‘s presence, and scarcely looked at %’I(‘l‘ without mumbling "nine hundred pounds!" got used to her and, m a way, ford of her; at any rate, she was good enough to permit Sylvia to do most of the work of the hut, and would have extended her kindness to the length of allowing Sylvia to do it all; but Neâ€" ville interfered and informed Meth that he had not bought a domestic servant, | but a "sister." ! _As Sylvia grew stronger she became | happier. Those wondrous gray eyes of | hers grew bright with a light that seemâ€" ed to night them needl "Jack‘s" clothes, which . sadiy . HECNER them. Her voice, too, altered, and though it was still low pitched and refined there was a ring in it which reminded Neville of bells heard at a distance, of an Aeolâ€" ian harp, and sundry other kinds _ of music. But if her voice was like music her laugh was music itgelf. It is true that she laughed but seldom, but when she did Neville found himself obliged to laugh, too, or die, and he caught himâ€" self setting traps for that laugh, and rejoicing when he succeeded in catching it. PW L Unincuces LE It was a strange life for a young girl. Besides her "brother" Jack and Meth, she saw no one excepting at a distance, for the miners, taking the hint which Neville had given Lockit, carefully avoidâ€" ed the neighborhood of the young un‘s claim and left him alone more severely than ever. But Sylvia did not appear to find it dull, and seemed perfectly content. Neâ€" ville had found two or three books at the bottom of his trunk. A volume of 1 : _ 1 \ Loreve a 1 540 002 Tc WPs al in o7 dull, and seemed perfectly content. Neâ€" ville had found two or three books at the bottom of his trunk. A volume of Tennyson, Macaulay‘s England. . "Wild Sports in the West," and "The Farrier‘s Vade Mecum," and Sylvia devoured these of an evening, when she felt disinclined for needlework, and sometimes brought one down to the edge of the claim and read there; very often, however, letting the â€" book lie disregarded _ in her Tac Sutucts Ter eves dwelt on the handâ€" lap, wiule her eyes dwelt on the hand~ some face and stalwart form of "her tLrother," as he picked and dug and toilâ€" ed in the dusty hole. "Indeed, her eyes were seldom off him when he was within her sight, and she followed him about unobtrusively whenâ€" ever she could, and seemed quite conâ€" tented if he would allow her just to keep him company, and did not mind his long fits of silence. Neville was not a great taiker, but often when Syivia thought that he was unuware of or had forgotten her presâ€" encs, he was thinking of her. }hlr unâ€" cemsciously he liked to have her near hiia, and if she remained away from the claim longer than usual, he found himâ€" self looking out for her. For the rest he treated her as a young man of nearly twenty always treats & girl of fifteen. She was a mere child in his eyes, a child to be petted and hbuâ€" mored and "taken care of," but someâ€" ‘times he found himself{ startled and. bothered by some trick of speech or turn of thought in the child which savored very strongly of the full grown woman; and at such timesâ€"when, for instance, she would quote Tennyson, as she had | quoted Shakespeare, and let fall some | bit of worldly wisdom irom her soft | lipsâ€"he would straighten his back and | wipe the perspiration from his brow, and stare at her meditatively, and the 1quostion would rise in his mind unâ€" | casily: Wwes. u) c nc on cne i n ce oae 2c when she grows up?" ‘ But he always put it aside with the reflection that she was only a child and that she wouldn‘t "grow up" for years yet, and so end with laughing at her précocity. As to the light in which Sylvia reâ€" garded himâ€"who can describe or even divine it? This much may, however, be said; that she regarded him as her brothâ€" er, anu in the recesses of her girlish mind thought him the best, the handsomest, the bravest, and altogether the noblest specimen of man Besiles, he wase sometising more thas her brother. She never forgot for a moment, though since his injunction she hid never again referred to it, that he had "bought‘" her, and she regarded him as her owner and master. She considâ€" ered that she owed him not only sisterly love, but implicit obedience. Neville had only to express a wish for her to set about gratifying it; indead, very often Keville found that she had supplied his desires before he had given them weice If he had told her to climb up the rugâ€" ged hill that overlooked the viiley and throw herself from the highest precipice ghe would have done it. k illuminate the hut, especially at when the solitary candle shone on is she sat at ncedlework; the said work consisting of â€" repains to s" elothes, which _ sadly â€" needed What on earth shall sorry to say she has hut, especially at iry candle shone on I do with her She was his by right of purchase, and something more, and this conviction, which in her mind was &s strong as a religion, brought no pain with it, but, rather, a vague kind of pleasure and sapisfaction. A 3 7 1Â¥ ALfauas h d Aunay During the mon: looking up in Lor though no one had big as Neville‘s, the 7 evinle 8, ATC B B IEE CCC During the month things hbad bf".'n‘ » looking up in Lorn Hope Camp, aud.DlSlppi though no one had found a nugget ns1 D big as Neville‘s, the men had had better luck, and some of them declared th.ltl There the "orphan," as they called Sylvia, had | w hen th brought the luck back to Lorn Hops,| are tho and that they were all going to be| proachir rich. red blo« Wiks LC o1 utA Eate nb D Dilic se 13087. Neville‘s claim only just Eaid for his laborâ€"at very low wagesâ€" ut he still «tuck to it, and with more contentment than he would have imagined possible, Working by one‘s self, with no one to whare hopes and fears, was & different thing from working with Sylvia‘s symâ€" wo+Ke always turned on, and the dust Working by one‘s self, with no One "0 whare hopes and fears, was & different thing from working with Sylvia‘s symâ€" pathy always turned on, and the dust and the heat, though they were really quite as bad as before, did not seem half «o unendurable and aggravating with Sylvia sitting by the edge of the pit, just out of the dust, and in the shade of an awning he had rigged up for her. s We‘ Lliitas thava She was never U" and sometimes, aiter ille, thinking she had turn and look at her eyes fixed upon hi him more worthy of the book One day, in the midst of one 0f LACS® silences, she began to sing. At first she sang in a low, subdued voice, then, as if she had forgotten his gcraped the dust from his spade: ‘ S yc anP c pentironina hadtc CR AAN ES PAAA C CCC eeesccud E "Bravo, Sylt You don‘t pipe badly. Thought it was a thrush at firstâ€"an English thrush, you knowâ€"â€"â€"" resence, her voice grew fuller, but not rens sweet, and she sang like a nightinâ€" gale. mes 0 on lt eb he cins n tas "I know," she sence of selfâ€"con o " Neville was startled, but ful to keep his back to . frighten the bird that had ed the hot silence with s melody. ' â€" Wce v esd ‘.}-!'eâ€"'\‘;aited until sh he said as carelessly "When you were in Neville. She nodded. M L200 PPDTITCCT "Yes, It was in the country I heard the birds sing." She pressed her lips toâ€" gether and knit her brows till they made a straight line over her eyes. "Yes, it was in the country, andâ€"1I can rememâ€" ber, now I try. that I was riding a litâ€" tle pony, andâ€" andâ€"â€"" She put her hand to ber forehead and sighed. "It‘s sU seana mow! Walit‘s minute," â€" and _ "Let‘s have another of the Bishop‘s, then," said Neville. SLEEPING DRAUGHTS AND SOOTHING MIXTURES A wise mother will never give her little one a sleeping draught, _ soothâ€" ing mixture or opiate of any kind except upon the advice of a compeâ€" tent doctor, who has seen the child. All _ these things contain _ deadly poison. _ When you give your baby or young child Baby‘s Own Tablets, you have _ the guarantee of a government analyst that this medicine does not contain oneâ€" particle of opiate _ or narcotic, and â€" therefore .cannot . posâ€" sibly do harmâ€"but always do good. Mrs. George M. Kempt, Carleton Place, Ont., says: _ "I have given Baby‘s Own Tablets to my baby since he was two weeks old. He was a very small, thin baby, but thanks to the Tablets he is now a big, fat, healthy boy." Sold by medicive dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Company, Brockville, Ont. cal cheese CBeDSE. "Yes, I‘ve often thought so,"" said the chief quietly, ‘"but be‘s the inspecting enâ€" gineer for the company, all the same." _ Awsarican Machinict Kind Deed At a meeting of a Band of Mercy class in a small town neur Denver each child relates the kind deed he or she has reâ€" cently done. One day the teacher asked little Emilghto relate the kind deed she had done. She quickly rose and said: Mrs. Jonesâ€"Good gracious, Mrs. Brown, why is your husband â€" going through all those strange actions? Is he training for a prizeâ€"fight!" Mrs. Brownâ€"Not at all; he‘s merely petting in form to beat the carpets.â€" Harper‘s Weekly. "I took off a tin can tied to a little dog‘s tail." The teacher asked, "Did you â€" know who tied it on?" "Yes," replied Emily, with hesitation. "I didn‘t know any kind deed to report, so I tied it on so that I could take it off."â€"Philadelphia Ledger. bel‘;;wn loafer is an awful chestnut. Jokesmith~YÂ¥+s, but I‘ve given it a new fwist C Editorâ€"This joke about the baker never tired of sitting there, nes, after a long silence, Nevâ€" g she had fallen asleep, would ok at her, and meet her gray upon him, as if she found corthy of her attention than (To he continued.) artled, but he was careâ€" back to her, and not d that had suddenly fillâ€" nce with such delicious Spring Cleaning. 1 she had finished, then ssly as he could, as he said, with an utter abâ€" â€"â€"Amecrican Machinist can tied to a little one of thes land said SKIN ERUPTIONS AND PIMPLES Disappear Under a Treatment With Dr. Walliams Pirk Pilis. There can be health and vigor only when the bioed is rich and red, There are thousands of young men just :g- proaching manhood who need the rich, red blood that only Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills can make. They have no energy; tire out at the least. exertion, and feel by the time they have done their day‘s work, as though the day was a week long. In some cases there is a furâ€" ther sign o« danger in the pimples and distiguring eruptions which break out on the face. These are certain signs that blood is out of order and that a comâ€" plete breakdown imay result. In this emergeney Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is ‘the‘ medicine these young men should take. These pills actually make rich, red blood. They clear the skin oi pimples and eruptions and bring bealth, strength and |\ energy. Here is the experience of Adolphe Rolland, of St. Jerome, Que., a young man 19 years of age, who says: "For more than a year 1 suffered from genâ€" eral weakness, and I gradually grew so weak that I was foreed to abandon my work as a clerk. My appetite failed me, is the cause of all common discases like angemia, headaches. neuralgia, rheumaâ€" tism. sciatica, indigeston, all nervous troubles, general weakness and the speâ€" eal ailments that omy women _ folk know. Dr. Williams‘® Pigk Pills are the one cure. because they yo right to the root of the trouble in the blood. They change the bad blood into good blood and thus bring health,. strength and en ergy, You can get these pills from "any medicize dealer. or by mail at 50c a box or six boxes for £2.50, from the Dr. WwWil liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. In German Hotels Ask Not Her Geer of his heart. will send for you, in which case i to you in a beautiful lit you will pay for it five Not « for if 3 bottle © give to ket. as 1308 is PA MB maini P "Monsieur." s«aid the stately maitre Photel on that occeasion, "this cafe has never served, does not serve, and never will serve, plumâ€"pudding!" Not quite so bad as that in Berlin, for if you are willing to first order a bottle of wine, which you may drink, or give to the waiter, or put in your pocâ€" ket, as you please, you will then be graciously permitted to drink as much beer as you have a taste for. If you are a teetotaler, or won‘t order wine, then you can get neither food nor beer, and may the devil take you for troubling them, For this. the Berliner _ has to M Ts SS c anine (Pmigt ȴBIch :scontrole a teetotaler, 0 you ean get n« may the devil them,. For thi thank the wine trusi, WANM TOCEHOWC the fashionable establishments of the city and has led to the â€" significent diâ€" vision of all restaurants into two classâ€" esâ€"the "wine restaurants" and the "beer restanrants."â€"From "Famous Cafes and Restaurants Abroad," by Auwâ€" brey Lanston ni The Bohemian for May,. when spring comes, then pd IMAIM® IM® an ‘inke the ashes out below an‘ clene up things out in the shedd, tha work me till i‘m nerely dedd ; then when the kids come round an‘ #Ay come out we‘ve gotta game to play, Ma hollers from & room upstares, You stay! You can‘t go anywheres, i‘m beetin ruge out in the yard, 4i tell you wot it‘s orful berd; i‘m goin ‘toget mad some day, an‘ then 1M marry Bessie gray; An‘ then we‘ll have a ll:aoz may be, that wants to play As as me, - TV oi Coltvns comsNBl amr g. whizz, it makes me orful @ick, when spring coms round ihafto kick; it‘; Wilie get down on your kness An‘ pull carpets !if u please ; it‘s run upstairs an‘ get the broomâ€" i left it in the sewing rOO.dâ€" when all the kids are playin‘ ball i‘m belpin‘ me clepe out the hall. _. whizz, i hait to get the hose an‘ wosh the winders, jes‘ suppose mi gurl shud passâ€"she‘s Bessie Grayâ€" an‘ se me there; wot would she say? 4 bot she‘d giv me horty looks an‘ mever let mo take ber books To Skule fer her, she‘d «horn, i kno, A winder wosher for ber bo. When a woman )« dr Aoesn‘t necessarily mea been to a flaunghter sale Â¥ "" in : PR P PPVOTEO C oosudl the spring time comes wa‘ll say ie you may go &n‘ play. Willie‘s Protest comes, then pa maiks me go is dressed to kill it mean that she bas h Special Ward in a State Hospital For Thos. Threatened With Madness. A ward specially designed for the treatment of people who fear that they are threatened with insanity is being built at the Hudson River State Hosâ€" pital, near Poughkeepsic, N. Y., and will be opened in a few weeks. It is the \phn of the State authorities to accept voluntary application â€" for treatment. l'l'here will be no red tape to go through | with, and if the individual recovers or finds that his fears were groundless there will be no court record of insanity to plague him and his heirs. 7 . C Ne ns OME m + n i C 34 < M LadB t â€"etealfest utd in jo e 9 'fl-:-e peychopathic building, as it is termed, will have room for 80 patients. There will be a free clinic in connection with it, which will also be an innovaâ€" tion. The plan of treatment of incipient cases of insanity has been successfully tried in Germany. It will be tried this year also at the Binghamton hoepital, and next year it will be extended to the hospital at Hiddletown and Utica. Euperintendent Pilgrim, of the Hudâ€" zon River State Hospital, is strongly impressed with the possibilities of the new method. NW T BP ove P "The patients," he said, "need never see any of the regularly committed paâ€" tients to the hospital proper. Legisinâ€" tive consent will be asked to receive and discharge them without an order of the court. This will make it possible to carry on a humane work of practiâ€" cally limitless scope in the ficld of menâ€" tal weakness." _ t hnb n State officials in samne say that in t patients committed treatment are in BBR CRARTTUTCT State officials in charge of the inâ€" sane say that in the majority of cases patients committed to institutions for treatment are in an advanced . stage and hard to cure. From It the Expert Anatomist Can Reconstruct the Animal. Teeth are not bones, as most people imagine them to be. Though they are attached to the skeleton they are not a part of it. They develop from the dermis or skit and are as a rule made imagine them to be. Though they are attached to the skeleton they are not a part of it. They develop from the dermis or skit and are as a rule made up of three substancesâ€" â€"dentine, coment and enamel. Enamel is the hardest of all animal substances. 1t actually conâ€" tains more than 96 parts in one hundred of mineral matterâ€"mainly phosphate of limeâ€"while bone contains only 60 E:l‘ cent. This accounts for the fact that tecth are more indestructible than any other part of the animal frame. ' . 100004 L4M is thad TO TREAT INSANITY FEAR. RSEITE ECE T uen S T 00 m oc What is more wonderful still is that the tooth is the keynote of the frame. An expert anatomist needs only to be shown a tooth or two in order to rcâ€" construct from them the animal from whose jaw they originally cameâ€"ana this although the animal itself has been dead hundreds of years and its kind exâ€" tinct for almost as long. ‘ 7 & T D EEETHN PMC ET CCR Not only do the teeth show what their owner looked like, whether it was animal}, lizard, fish or birdâ€"some exâ€" tinct birds used to possess teeth â€"but & study of & set of these useful organs will show what the creature used to feed on, and incidentally tell a great deal about its life and habits. Teeth vary in form and number more than any other animal organs. An eleâ€" Ph‘m' for instance, has usually omly our teeth in use besides his tusks, But they are big enough to make up in size what they lack in number. The teeth of the elephant tribe are so different from those of other animals that when a fosâ€" sil is dug up the geologist can at once be certain to what race of creatures it belonged, and is able to reconstruct the gigantic mastodon or hairy mammoth in whose jaw it originally grew. At the other end of the scale, in point of number of tecth, comes the snail. The common garden suail is the happy po#â€" sessor of 135 rows, each of 105 teeth, or a matter of 14,175 teeth in all. P ie c u0 4.0.0 0 +t i 226 4+ Pictctnts anltaaiiegeni The teeth of fish vary more greatly than those of any other known creaâ€" tures. Thosir teeth are not divided into incisors, canines and molars, as in aniâ€" mals, but almost every different kind of fish has differently shaped teeth. Sharks, for instance, have several rows of teeth, all extremely sharp poirted. The front row stands up erect, but those ®behind are more or fesl recum bent, There is never difficulty in identifying a shark‘s tooth. . Mss & BHRTM B EIIACY Most fish have a great number of teeth. The dolphin, for instance, "K:I sesses two bundred, but there are others â€"like the sturgeonâ€"which have no teeth at all. Almost all fishâ€"sharks .rhl lyâ€"shed their tecth frequently grow new ones to replace them. E: C . en es ud et P oo ie e PmE cu Snake‘s teethâ€"the poison fangs, that isâ€"have the same peculiarity. . There are always fresh ones in reserve to lake the place of those which get broken. A rattlesnake may hbave as many as ten of these reserve *seth. Snake‘s fangs are very sharp, very elastic, and, conâ€" trary to common belief, never hollow, but provided with a groove, along which the poison flows. We C Rie ce uapo Clusouaitts smil The sharp tusks of the crocogue and all flesh eating lizards need only to be geen once to be easily identified afterâ€" ward. Some reptiles zre toothless, these are tortoises, turtles and roads. A m may easily be distinguished from a by the fact that the latter has no teeth, while the former has teeth in the upper jaw, but none in the Jower.â€"London Anâ€" swers. The Last Straw. (Detroit News.) When Jones came home from mor work, 1e He nearly died of fright ; The windows out, the carpets upâ€" It was an awful sight. "Xow, John, get busy," said his wife, "I need your help at once; ‘Don‘t need to clean! Well, I declare, You are a perfect dunce." Poor tugged, Determined to stick it through; And soon he was so tired and lame He didn‘t know what to do, But when be heard, "the rugs are up, Please beat them right away." He sneaked around to Bennett Park To watch the Tigers play. Paris will shortly be the scene of an extraordinary contest, all the drummers in the French capital being drums all the time. During the whole 20â€"mile tramp they must not stopp drumming ex for â€" three periods of 10 minutes :l“'l;c_v must _ also beat the regulation marches and not drum at the Jouble. TOOTH THE KEYNOTE Jones jumped in and heaved and To Drum Twenty Miles. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO of the crocodile nd from morning never "If 1 were you, my little boy, I wouldr‘t quarrel with my little friend, like that," said the consoling woman. "No," replied the precocious youth, "you‘d just run to a lawyer and start suit for diverce." "That boy of Brown‘s learned one accomplishment in college, amy way." “R:â€"(;l-re;p his trousers up with a belt just beautifully." | _Old Timerâ€"The wors experionce I ever had was when we ram out of port in a gale of wind. The Amateurâ€"Gracious! I thought sailors "Do you know, I suspect my wife is taking money from my pockets while I ’” ‘l““gnspeot it! Say, old man, wher you‘ve been married as long as 1 have you‘ll be sure of it." Defective. "Amelia, I have been trying for five years to win your favor, It‘s the only aim I have in life." % "Oh, Herbert, you‘re marksman!t" «Joeis® "Ella, you have been playing all the afternoon with those toy soldiers. That‘s not a proper amusement for a big girl like you," said her mother, "But, mamma, 1 am not playing with the soldiers. 1 picked out the officers and plaved with them."â€"Chicago News. "What‘s that ways draok rum nd playe Janitorâ€"No ma Matron (sniffing They were fond . and cedfish, M Tomâ€"DiG ejocution " M Prudent Swau kiss would it * would sceream * Timid Maidenâ€" wavse makes me erican "There goes . tune writing p« "Whâ€"hat *" "Xo, I‘m not down at Mamic Th Choosing Her Companions "and to." An vh Maud in the descripton; the C in by hand, and the who! the finishing room, where to chapters.â€"Puck, ine eXwct Giineremee umm Ee maue ~ O0C sophistry *" "Well," replied the bright student, ;i( you‘re enfipd in a controvers ‘% just the d eroncebetmyo‘rn'ud ;‘r_g\lue-t and the other fellow‘s."â€"Je ire, nel 10 W W here W1 it te M Dubl Explained. "What, then," asked the professor, "Jm e exact differemce between logic and 1 heard iith. ast it Gives Him No Trouble it Unly Suspected. igh Still in Evidence The Suburbanite h Her Method. Now, wher Ds Accomplished MISINFORMED lyse insatial Encouraging Theft Swainâ€"If 1 were t your wife ever take wes & m wr DoelPy The Only Way romaAn Times ma dn vest Repsirs Needed spi 11 A Precedent 1 inberited it Wise Rooster was marned Offended tadda i n VD n; the dialogue is put the whole then goes to n . where it is sawed inâ€" not playing with out the officers "â€"Chicago News. sehun in ouldn‘t Ne raving ts 1 alw vyou find i am asked to sing Cweat y such It‘s o about ple 110 W ho made a‘t. â€" Pright al Baltimore Am the id ippeared at tns tion. and aiter $Lat y , inquired 0 cents‘ worth ster n e to steal & so that you old man," sighâ€" is he rolled out court â€"vlaster \\ n machine | Na cart and over on but MTO 1O v irat heir said Towne, io live up it t poot hat young what‘s the farmer ut Â¥6 #M he lot rd lerk n idel unC

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