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Durham Review (1897), 13 Mar 1913, p. 2

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® $ duir OCC C AfMe Ubut Bo * obar Shan bur iltGe las* Ho, the hei inc La § feh 10 & jor 8By: the whic OX er ov . car an. dre C» fr H TY whe shall not tak when 1 have even him. 1 am now caf That thought bro darker to her bra conflicting tortures For an hour or 1 Ere‘yn pretended to demur a little, but ended by accepting. It was well her whiie lids drooped over her eyes, veiling their strange glitter. When she found herself shut up in the rolitude and scclusion of her own chamâ€" ber, she gave full vent to the terrible rage and despair that waged such deadâ€" ly war in her "heart. "Fate is playing She bailed the nearest cab, and, with a w hurriedly whispered words of direcâ€" on to the driver, wae scon whirling rapâ€" Iy over the streets of the city on her For Weal or for Woe:; CHAPTER XXY.â€"(Cont‘d) the best, heart. "Le worth to 1 hought de« er, Evelyn cular and ut of the : lk m " she mutic et me think me without | cide me." , wrapped i heavily ve Or, A Dark Temptation ut up in the r own chamâ€" the terrible d such deadâ€" e is playing h h at him, t« ed un W h Ir he "Khine toâ€"night, my pretty Gay!* she cried bitterly, "for you have to dis ere the day dawns. You were uncommoarly pretty when you were only a little loom girl in the Parsaie Cotton Millsâ€"now you are more beautiful than an houri! It would never do for you to meet my lover againâ€"hbe loved you onceâ€"he would adore you now," and involuntarily her hand crept to the fatal package concealed in come down," said Gay, sympathetically. "I will come in when it is over, and give you a perfect account of it." "Do," renlied Evelyn, again veiling the terrible glitter in her steelâ€"blue eves. She waiched the «lender figure ou: of sShe sight 1t [ exeuse for not ening to tha Arawing.scam F>/He help her! she little dreamed excuse for not going to the drawingâ€"r« n'n.’ Heaven d nsees C _ i tigerish hatie swept through Evelyn‘s | {D8t :}e‘.:tlrl;l:dfo?tghne:lha‘: the hefselt Aad wl soul as her oyes rested upou l“n}rla!.e;nmml to take the life of beauiiful foy, 21 She came into her room for 4| Gay, and that she had been frustrated by moment hefore going down to ‘"'""m"iMi-‘r,' St. Claire, a guest in the house! er guests. hk n 4‘ Feabe [ Wesindr y Th in ue entrom beag . tairly, took | antiinde "$r in terits, Shen this it her breath away. The dark eyes glowed | m . * M uns . like midnight stare. The lovely, (-urling’:';?"":i,::lxyh(?:,..k”'"’"! my secret, this h;'":,'»"" .“b"‘“ "‘h_" I};'tle h""g' 4t '; Sh‘{e:;f She threw herselif down into a eushionâ€" :-'hwl"m:.:e :‘l’l:h’(‘d ‘li;hp:i::- ;;'t'\;'tm:»p(eu ed chair by the window, and all through eximsg h e _ | the weary houre of the long night thought imeon flower, and the creamy tulle dress *A lofs C Séam Inst "the life of she wore, garnished bere and there with i"“; » 06‘ and plane agains e life waterâ€"lilies, set off the lovely arms and | "},',;,;;"” '.'xy. to be ch d Tife." clender, graceful neck to their ady int age, ’ she ‘ll'kll:l' 3”"’; t L "" tat:mot Ih".'ll m-.gllm'nwl by ithe pecklace of gleam;u‘,;mi n;n:';t :n'h u?n'hm{!;:'l:,h?lur:""’ Sm pearls she wore. in ‘ s + Evelyn 8t. Claire bit her lin furiamvlv, To be continued.) Evelyn 8t. Claire bit ber inder the mask of a smile i: the lovely vision before "T am so sorry you are Phe girl‘s wondrous beaunty fairly took her breath away. The dark eyes glowed like midnight stare. The lovely, carling hair fell about the little head in a sheen of shining . gold; ibe peachy, dimped cheeks were flusbhed like the heart of a Evelyn pieaded a severe headzche as an exeuse for noi going to the drawingâ€"room. A tigerish haue swept through Evelyn‘s very soul as her eyes rested upon Little Gay as she came into her room for a moment before going down to we‘leome her guests. Evelyn St. Claire regained her own room | _ _ . ____ _ ol en l t wele in the Remington mansion withoui being | ====â€"â€"â€"mm=â€"fm=mmmumuurommmmmmmmmmmmme missed. | F ; The footman who admitted her won. | temptation offered a noor girl who knew dered vaguely that Miss Gaynell‘s guent | 82 we!ll the true value of money? «hould have gone out alone on the etreect, } Who can blame hber that she wavered, especially at night, she being a etran.| *"4 that at last, dearly as she loved poor wer in the city, too. He told this to Favâ€"| Gay, the nromise of so much gold for nyâ€"Gay‘s maidâ€"who bad declared that timply writing a few words and holding sbe fairly hated the airish blonde “hulhes tongue, overcame her seruples? ordered her around as if she was nobody,|, Evelyn 8t. Claire rapidly wrote out a and hoped "for goodness sake she wzen‘t |few lines, and the thoughiless maid, too to remain long." ’tlalvd and dazzled by the heap of bil‘s There was to be a brilliant recention at+| OM the table, took un the nen and signed the Remington maosion that night, but | het »rame to the document, without stopâ€" Evelyn pleaded a severe headzche as an [ ping to read it over. . _° ~~<â€" i Gay thing should come of it," and a shudder passed over his frome. "Hello," he mutâ€" tered, with a violent etart, "what has beâ€" come of the fellow who was cleaning she whowâ€"ca ses ?" He glanced around in surpriseâ€"the old man was gone. la t had r d b} nd t been for he h hb pee in‘that way, miss," ly. "I have heard of ut in their sleep, many hlepered the girl, sigâ€" have never heard of a # what you aitemnted CHAPTER XXVI Claire regained her own room ngton mansion withoui being h cven vlded h h he er lip furiouely ile as she gazed re her. ire not able io sympathetically, s over, and give through her| Lord Raglan. â€" While carrying a gent‘le breath. | SCaling ladder to the Redaa, he was l<;ukhvld like a ) severely wounded, and it was the beautife [thought that bis carser was Anishâ€" of a fiend in~\ed. However, he made an ~xcelâ€" nath again,| lent recovery, and at the conclusion ow you musi of the Crimean War entered th> , | Light Dragoons. ‘r pocket and j * 4 x ward the gas.| â€" Henceforth, his career was one o! Faye of C and | continual active service. _ When ‘ays of sparkâ€"| nging ;‘.‘,,u,.A only tweatyâ€"one years of age he "._-“r:‘“;,',""":il gained the Victoria Cross in India. . _ she hissed, | 4. ‘ nd )i()ldilllgf.i[ |Few men have done more for the 'h{"‘per'sh nos expansion of the Empire. He Louki h ,1?:1"'}‘,,,;1'; | part in various campaigns in Egypt, re she ecald , Africs, and India, and was siagled | mok hetween | OUt for his daring and resource.| 100 etween es y | »duce instant | Finally he became a F Aeld-Mm'shall re 3 male | "3+ w x ’i'"“';'h'_""‘:‘;f,'::nnd Adjutantâ€"General to the Forcâ€"| the hesitat. es. Sir Evelyn Wood still retains | (Qupey "Ltkeâ€"|a keen interest in military matters, | ashed in the z + s | ling mement : and is chairman of the City of Lonâ€" ",b‘. Claire : don Territorial Forces ;\Ssuc:at:un.’ thtu!l maid, pretend ing upon her awhlul danger through her al] in “3"" Sir Evelyn Wood has juse celeâ€" »lling the brated his seventyâ€"filth birthday. e "our ; [ Despite his advanced age, he is full * 'uf vigor, and is only troubled with ay!" she n slight deafness. He is a regular ,'.’(,,;f:,‘",(,‘;f;'fol]ower of the Essex hounds, and ittle lUMfl’no fence is too. difficult for him to aurit "At|tackle. Sir Evelyn Wood is an Esâ€" my lover|sex man by birth, but his ancestors en "h‘f;';fl';q,nwned Hareston Manor, near Plyâ€" cealed in / mouth, for centuries. One of them at nignt, | named Matthew Wood, who was a _ auitced | hop merchant, as famous in the an-’ feet and i nals of London, for he was Lord | two aif.| Mayor of ‘the Metropolis, and enâ€" sed that joyed the distinction of representâ€" ent, be‘|ing the City in Parliament. _ walkzed| Sir Evelyn Wood éentered the | Sathes"® Anavy in T88%, and‘ served . in the | ed, them | Crimea with the Naval Brigade. He | -lnt.y--qni...],'f | greatly distinguished himself, and | ind ccare i was mentioned in dispatches by| thinl nder he | ed ng det _ Ine will found in a scrapâ€"book which came prominently before a Dumfries (Scotland) Court, is one of many that have beea discovered in unlookedâ€"for places. Even Mr. Rider Haggard‘s story of the will tattooed on a woman‘s back is nearly equalled by the c@se in which a dead man‘s arm, carcfully preâ€" served, was produced in the probate court. On the flesch appeared the last wishes of the testator concernâ€" ing his estate. A lawyer, who is chiefly concerned with will cases, gave a representative various inâ€" stances of strango places where wills were found. i h Wiil Tattooed on Man‘s Arm ‘The â€" will Sound in s srvanih This h Because they act so purging or gripin C Goes farthest for the money LIPTON‘S T EA Tea A CRIMEAXNX YETERAX gh cost of living is a seri »i,"‘ bawled the cam or. "lt is a great ques ‘ry serious question, in Discorcerting Sitr Evelyn Waood arsoe A GOOD HABIT when partici act so gently (no griping) yet so jou are tired arly if it‘s 162 Seotch â€" Broth.â€"Half cup pearl barley, 2 pounds of neck of mutton, 2 quarts of cold wtaer, oneâ€"half cup each of carrot, turnip, onion and celery, two tablespoons of butter or drippings, one tablespoon flour, two teaspoons salt, one saltspoon white pepper, one tablespson chopped parsley. Pick over and soak the barâ€" ley over night or several hours in torty minutes to one hour. Serve with baked or steamed apples. Exâ€" cellent for. constipation. Fine hominy and granuvlated wheat are cooked in the same way, but reâ€" quire only three times as much water as meal. Whole or cracked wheat requires five times as much water as méal, and should cook four or five hours. Salmon Croquettes.â€"Take equal quantities of cold or hot boiled rice and canned salmon, addâ€" a little melted butter and salt and pepper to taste. Mold into small sausazeâ€" shaped forms and roll them first in finely powdered crackers, then into p For the Cook. Asparagus | Salad.â€"Arro canned asparagus tips on h O; Here you cnn?d stop if you like, | * anything ('ISP.‘ and if occasionaliy but a fnklâ€" rub over with a flanneliw“h(.d they will last far dloager. cloth dipped in soapsuds and turps | About once a week prepare a good will make perfection perfect. The;!alher of soap and hot water, and carpet will be as new. Dry \rel‘\'[mt“ this dip the broom or brush thoroughly cut of doors. A worn| 4P and down, Shake till nearly spot can be doctored by carefully {d".\'- and hang up with the bristles dollyâ€"dyeing it to the ground wh;rIlilu\\'..w-:u'ds. ol the carpet. j } i ctninse cescrnt M coand dn omcs ’ Now temporarily relay the «-.'1r-!'1'l pet so that all spots and marks | . | may be removed. Go carefully over :pi ithe whole carpet with a hot iron | fand brown paper. â€" This will reâ€" | | move grease spots, visible and inâ€" | v, l\-isihle. If any remain not absorbâ€" | ;/ |ed by the brown paper, spread 2 | fy {them a paste of fullers‘ earth and | u} | water, leaving it there until dry, ut and then brushing off. The marks | j . | will soon disapear. io | _ Any other spots, of unknown oriâ€" | gin, can be successiv ely rubbed with | i petrol, turps, methylated spirits, or i ful soap and water. | ble There should now not be a spot !“" on the carpet, and all that remains | wt is to clean it and freshen the colâ€" (€d ors. For that make a mixture "!lan balf a pint of oxgall in half a ga]~iw lon of hot water, and brush this inâ€" i1 to the carpet kÂ¥h aâ€"soft brnsh.; g Wash the lathér off with cotton | q,, cloths wrung out in ammonia 'mdi\.'e waterâ€"tablespoonful to a gallon "{bri renewing as it gets dirty. [ 48 Here you could stop if you like, HwAa but a final rub over with a flannel} Ab cloth dipped in soapsuds and turps| int will make perfection perfect. The:inb carpet will be as new. Dry very|"" side. _ Do this systematically, so that the whole ‘surface receives atâ€" tention. _ Brush once more, and then test for dust. A little may rise, for handâ€"beating never quite removes it all. Quite riglit, too, for the amount of dust and dirt which even wellâ€" swept carpets will retain is marvelâ€" Now "In the spring the housewife‘s fancy Lightly (?) turns to thoughts ofâ€" carpets |" | nome | Carpet Wisdom. Arrange the pet Seed : Qats Sheâ€"It seems strange that you | did not remember my face and yet | you remembered my name. _ He: (awkwardly)â€"Well, you know, you‘ have an attractive sort of name. | Social Uplift, ‘"Has Maud succeeded in gettiag into gociety yet!‘ ‘‘No, but she‘s rising in the socia‘! scale. _ She‘s been snubbed by a better class of people this year than last." uis Adctaaca s C Rnrmnent DC APGCIAT pledge," he said. _ "I‘ll be reet |estate a |down outâ€"an‘â€"out teeâ€"teeâ€"total for | alted in I('\'Pr and ever." ‘50 per c« [ ‘‘*Well done!‘ shouted the meetâ€" Hfast of t ing, and the word@ was adopted with | mer usu !(-nthusiasm. | proporti« f There was no reference to tea, as i far from is often supposed, nor was the word | get home the result of a stuttering attempt | may wal at the word "total" ; for 'l‘urnt'rfha]f mile was not a stammerer. He was a | sorts «f ready coiner of words upona any |their les emergency, and often ;wr;wtlatrd[ad(-quaw what ia an Irishman would be callâ€" | untold m ed "bulls." In one of his impus»l A brisk sioved addresses on temperance, he | medicine said : ‘‘We will go with our axes on |is a woe our shoulders and plow up the | are men great deep; and then the ship 06f | has been temperance shall sail gallantly over | firements the land." |dar â€" thes t FOR your Field in the GOYâ€" )ee KBNME@NT FIELD CRO# COMPRIITION you cansot do botter toan send for our ‘ Cataiogue. and see what wa have to offer in SEK®D OA18. We bare 1 splendid stock and 8 fg »will be glad to send samples GEO. KEITH & SONS, 124 King St. Ea«t, Tor: nto, Ont, _ Seed Merchants s nos 1806 drinking habits of his fellow townsâ€" |_One doctor pointed out that the ’mt‘n. In ‘"The Manchester u')d‘""’t'h(‘rs do not nurse their chilâ€" ,Glasguw Road," Mr. Charles G. dren. and at the age of three 1:l'lfll'l)Pr.des(;)'ibeq the work of this!m(’"‘l“‘ they are supposed taâ€"be" interesting man : ’ablf‘ to take porridge and sops '“"‘{ Outside of Preston, probably not milk of their cows is given to t-hel one person in a thousand knows CAlves. and there is no milk fur(h"-' how the word "teetotal" came intolf'h;id"'“ ‘‘They are rearing catyes popular use. It was, to all intents | NStead of rearing children," the | ard purposes, deliberately invented l‘doctmr declared. ' by ‘"Dicky"‘ Turner, who, at a| Children are becoming decadent meeting held in the Old Cockpit, |owing to lack of proper food. Exâ€"] declaimed vehemently against ‘thei"““iw indulgence in overâ€"brewed | arguments of the moderate driak. tea is mentioned as a great evil. I ers, and insgsted upon total absti-, Tea OQusting Porvridge,. t :‘-i“"('f;-h;“ "lwl(l! hn:"(‘ no'wt to dee| _ ‘‘The good “;';‘ ;y;;.".;fige pot (sars| pledus 37 he sa(;""a '(’21‘1;"t'h9rat1«)11)n doctor) has fallen from its hign P ~"B~, 1t SAHL, be reet estate and the teapot has been »xâ€"| TORONTO THE PIRST TEETOTALER. The Word Was Coined in the Ta Strangely enough it is rare];' deemed necessary to clean a brooim. Yet all household brooms and brushes need to be cleaned as much be reâ€"absorbed, and the milk will not be so impoverished. When washing new curtains you will generally find that they are full of lime. ~A great deal of trouâ€" ble may be saved by soaking the curtains over night in water in which a little salt has been dissolyâ€" ed. The salt draws out the lime. and makes the curtains quite easy to wash without too much rubbiag and soap. * 15 | _ _An iron soon becomes cold when | placed on a cold ironstand. _ To | prevent this place an ordinary Ibrick in the oven some hours before |ironing. Use this hot brick as an ironstand, and the iron will keep {hot a much longer time. When boiling new milk, to pre vent a skin from forming on the top as it cools. add two tablespoon fuls of cold milk to every piat when at boiling point, and stir for a min ute. The so called skin will then Before applying a new coating of paint to the wall of a room it is advisable thoroughly to clean the old surface. Do this by dissolving 1 ounce of soda in a pint of warm water and use while warm with a piece of flannel. Finally wash over with clean, hot water. Cabbage is made more nutritious and digestible if boiled in two waters. It contains a certain oil, which is apt to have a bad effect on people with weak digestion. Boiling in two successive waters corrects this. If fine linen is stained with tea, even after a long time. the stains can be removed by applying glycerâ€" ine. _A little of the best glycerine should be rubbed on the stained parts before washing. After wringing clothes get a piece of old blanket and mangle it two or three times. This will dry the rollers and save them. Stamps which have become stuck together may be separated by passâ€" ing a hot iron across their faces. cold water. Wipe the meat with a clean wet cloth, Remove the fat and skin. Borape the meat from the bones and cut it into halfâ€"inch dice. Put the bones on to boil in I" pint of cold water and the meat in 3 pints of cold water, Let the latter boil quickly and then add the barley. _ Cut the vegetables into quarterâ€"inch dice. fry them five minutes in one tablespoon of butâ€" ter and add them to the meat. Simâ€" mer three or four hours or until the meat and barley are tender. Strain the water in which the bones have simmered. Cook one tablespoon of butter in a sauce pan with one tablespoon of flour. When smooth, add the strained water gradually and stir into the broth. Add the salt, pepper and parsley. Bimmer ten minutes and serve without straining. Strained for aa invalid, it forms a nourishing and dvlicmci meal. Mints for the Home. cined in the Town on to boil in and the meat ter. Let the i Even when the doctor is availâ€" able, medical attention has to be | given under most difficult condiâ€" |tiors. _ Oneâ€" doctor conducted an ‘operatiun in a hut where a clerk gave chloroform and ligh* waus ahâ€" \ tained from a tallow candfe held by a veighboring crofter, who fainted a ve‘ghboring crofter during the preeseding To meet the exce;, stances, . an additio grant is recommended tion is urged of a s on ~the island for the last soeven years, asd that on one occasion, when no other help was available. he "had to bring out the medical dictionary and to take it to *the echoolmaster and to get him to at tend."‘ "alted in it« plage. . Probably over 50 per cent. go to school on a break !fast of tea and loaf bread, the forâ€" \ mer usually long brewed. A #arge }propm'liml of the children live so far from school that they can not fget home for a midâ€"day meal. These may walk from one to two and a #half miles to and *rom school in all sorts of weather, and they work at their lessons all day upoa this inâ€" adequate breakfast. All this works ; untold mischief." | A brisk trade in American patent | medicines has sprung up, and :'hvrei is a woeful lack of nursos, Cases| are mentioned where the .husbuud, has been the only atteadant in conâ€"| fivements. Many mothers dis unâ€", der these conditions, and infant| mortality is abnormally high. ' Father MeNeili «4/ Eriskay in | formed the comm‘tise that n» doe‘ tor had atterded a matornity ease | ~**When they have bone disease| [they use the old remed‘ies. A m.'ml had to drive nine miles and walk [about another six to an old lady :‘.‘.’ ; Licisto. The old lady made up some | rhyme and mixed some grasses with | | water and sand, and sung. He| | came back and said he was a little| Ihettrer. The seventh son is supâ€"l | posed to be able to cure such disâ€" in Gaelic cures exists and strange customs are practised. i _ Black Cock Buried Alive, | | _A witness from the remote ls]fllld;‘ of Rona (Skye), which a doctor | rarely visits, told of a "cure‘‘ apâ€"| plied in the case of an epileptic. A } black cock was buried alive beneath | the spot whers the patient had had ; the first attack of epilepsy. He also | described the successful treatment} of a woman suffering from ‘‘King‘s | Evil," i.e., bone or gland tubercuâ€" | losis, by a seventh son, to whom she | had gone all the way to the Island | of Scalpay, Harris. â€" Referring to| the prevalence of this form of treayâ€" | ment, Dr. Tolmie, South Harric,l EAVE : t , A very painful light is thrown on 'thc wretched cornditions of life in |the remote Highlands and Scottish |islands in a report issued recent‘y ’un the medical gervice there. The population is sparse, and many of |the inhabitants live from ¢wenty to thirty miles from the nearest docâ€" [tor. In addition, the country is ‘ruggtd. roadless, and mountainous, [and when the weather is bad travol lis often impossible,. _ As a conseâ€" |quence casos are mentioned where [patlents have to wait in pain a fortâ€" jnight and even longer for the docâ€" |tor,. A Dr. Macedonaid got the {hero‘s medal for crossing a hill at |\the risk of his life to atternd a pa Houses are mere hovels of one room with damp walls, damp clay floors, and badly drained. The atâ€" mosphere is often smoky, and cattle are housed under the same roof. Consequently the people suffer from many ailments. And to add to this pitiful state of affairs, belief tient. The bulk of the people, too, | are very poor, and a good deal ofl the doctors‘ work has to be gratuiâ€" | tous. 1 Half the Children Go to School on a Breakfast of Tea and Bread. THE TEAPOT AXD PORRIDGE FPORMER OUSTIXG THE TER IX SCOTLAND. on a sealed lead package of Ceylon Tea, safeguard and guarantee. | l "o "SALADA" means freshness, purity, exquisite aroma, delightful flavor. "SALADA" means purity, healthfulness, sati,. faction. BLACK, GREEN or MIXED availâ€" to be hy the | (called pitsuim} the jand kept in a les ‘ (district office of the | lage), that it ma lin a deed. LATâ€" cents ap‘ece, in shape, but others squars one hai?f inch The material en these seals consists of precious stones, i'l‘hmw mostly in us {day are of agate, livors. rhinoceros «© ‘"Too had‘!: Mrs. Smartleigh a ways has such abominable weat!= for her afternoon teas * "Yeqs she never pours but it rains!"‘ ma«ke cents The niku has o+ There charact taglfu, the imy while n Wabe not l Chiva‘s state seal is used chiefy upon documents relating to foreign ‘(-uunu‘ies. explains the Oriental Roâ€" view, and has Chinese characte?= 'stamped on it. The privy seals are stamped on imperial rescripts, is {sued for pxoclamations at home vlu’isl;}l\"'fiuht requires that each aave§®" mirould sead in an imâ€" prestion f_L.s seul as a specimen (called fitl’ul*h’n‘ @ye it re gistered a:l_d k_ep( in l._(tn‘.t’hn“ t â€" aiffice lare used, in ad«dition to a sign to represent an individual, a person or a corporation. The used by the former emperor distinguished as privy and seals, and were three Isquure. stone, Too, There Porms Part of Avticles Usually Made of Metal. In China seals are made of wood and stone, as well as of metal. Thes epoah smoldst *e WY'& ‘i“'. uik"“‘d resmionr f Jus se4 called jnsui*t"l’r»:. nd kept in a . ga listrict office of ~ « ige), that it mavor fashion of shoulders the best : The Empr beautiful sh Pompadour high heeled of inches. arms ; into fa with a eal pi guimpe. It was because La Bell niere had a burn exact middle of her forshead wore over the cicatrix the jewel held by a fine thre: called a Ferronnicre to t hid _come into use, here are two ways of engraving racters on a sealâ€"relicft and inâ€" lio,. In the one the characters in impression are showh in eoclor, le in the other they are repreâ€" ted in white on colored ground ink used for stamping is called u. 1t is generally of vermilion The wife of Philippe HL + Mlicted with a tremendoush neck. so she invented the wishes had a distinct influenc the tendsacy of fashion. The c liked to copy the smallest deia whim of his majesty or of the ; cesses who surrounded him. example, trains owe their origi the fact that the daughters of 1. IX. had abnormally large fect 64 gtiving ie How some Reegrrent Modes Â¥. Originated. If the most noteworthy trait the fashions of the present day is eclecticism which permits no . dominant teadency to hold =wa the reason may perhaps be fo« in the fact that while Paris un doubtedly sets the fashion for ; whole feminine world, Par‘s is ; capital of a republic. Formerly, under the Empi when there was a king ~ throne of France, the sove; authority and a «special |, thority for the developm, correlated â€" administration public medical service., CHINXESE SEA1 PH CLEANEET, smuPLEeST, and Di me cen boy »Why you don‘t ev An 1 the bl ted ruff # n WHY FASHIONX® CHfA %63 a a" the a uare. They rar nch in diametey apest kind of sea‘ls boxwood and sold ce, Most seals ar but some are roun wen nre impossibls > Color Carc, «i suits of Dysing s ANC f their eC3 U s shoulaers, so decolletage w} bare and sot | advantage . RIOHARDSrY u1 as well as 0 n addition t« recently India elgin OT who «ul mish b« creato« ©1 Di y rep on don‘t even ha your Goods are (:f l’ ployed to make of various kinds gold, silvem etc. e at the prosent rock â€" ervatal. sea‘s are « are round . rarely exo tX U wood «7 0} WOOD,. sent himseli town Tr ty ti HOMT th iznatu 18 Youp incn FT «ta t} PC NOTES AND CO ed with a A tirement. Abdul‘s w thoritativ« Wit) man U «4 Abdu! Ham TT a 9 had H tate RY 0 10 th d

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