West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Feb 1898, p. 3

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the Bud... g on he.- inisuf for t length to lations now a 103032 was. -- "eh to I. 'III Exile! O. n An. I. to - fs' m0 0 htr" who Ilillu, b " " ma l tut.. ty tour uizuin. a Cath- -t is u. harm! " Iv-d ---Ad. neat in tablet nub- I " 7-. rdn n 'tt pay trial lb. It has. CRAP!“ II. i the old month an» that thej course of true love never rune smooth. _ Dura nn 'smoothly enough. The doo- tor leached when Mark told hu, of not uqu when Mark told him of an: easement. Mr mother “I“ de- lighted; aha had liked Mark from the tirat. The one great drewbeck was that he we: compelled to go to Indie ., I tar (or four years. He m . civil engin- eer by profession. and e lucrative ap- pointment bed been attend to him en ti railway which was being extend- M. The advantages that Would M's-rue to him were great. Be would gain im- mensely in experience and knowledge. end he would make money. But during the first law happy mks we did not think much of the ' porting. " we: a dark cloud ahead " as, a cloud that had noilvor lining; for when the four years were ended} Mark was to return home and we w..-re ', to be married. I should. he promised I me. always have a home in the coon-l try. He could never ssh me to live; la the town. It was in the month! d May that we met, and in July wel period. but during the interval we went the greater part of the tune to- ptber. Other summer days have;l Inwned for me, but none like those'! UNDER TriiiijiiCjiir'i'iijgjii. him and love. Me mother truthed. "Nothing gives no more pleasure. Nollie. than to know how happy you no with Mark. I believe he is true as . man can be." "True " a man on be. mum. nuns infinitely true." I interrupted. “At no my dear Noll“! Ion no but moral; their power of loving is not hmrt.ite. I do not wrist madden you. to on...» your mm to dim your htm C which my young lover came in the It]! morning, while the dew sparkled on the grass. when we walked through tho woods and down by the river. not- lng with loving eyes all that was no fair and beautiful around us, return- ing Irom our long rambles. our hands ".\'ollio." an! Mid. "you should newer give to . nature the love that isduo to tho avatar. t have often thought. dear child," she continued. "that you Iowa Mark too much. It is not safe to can!" all yogi) lapping in _"Pe per- son ff anything happens to that me, your w bole life is shipwrecked." "Than can b no shipwreck when blur): in," I summed. strong in my (Lllod with wild fiowerm, to find m! mother waiting breath“ for us, the tabla set out on the lawn. That Mark wouid linger tad [was the morning with me. He came lock in th, after- new and stayed with in until the mom rose. How I loved Mant Than I saw only the but] of a great passion; now I me its pain and its pathos; now I know that the mighty power of love ha“. not teen given to no to be contor- od in any creature. Then I had one Idol, and alas. I worshipped itl Ihad no I no - from my young lover's. I "ever tired of looking at the dark beauty of his face. of listening to his voim, and. when he was absent from me, of recalling every word he had mpolceu. I had no life, n0'love, no (one no rhvvuaht apart from him. I read the love stories of others, written in poetry and prose: bat no love was like mine. Surely wine people, while they 'h"e'"iill,,tii would have wept over itl If be ml naked for my life, I ah luld have 3mm it to him. us I had given my love freely and with a smile. [felt something like pity for thoee ha did not love; I felt that every girl liv- Int must envy the. Mark Upton cured tor me quite as much es I loved him. We spent those weeks in a land Into which no cure, no narrow c--the leiryland of love and hope. Every hour brought us closer number. bound no by newer and Sweeter tlee, while, the summer (Lowers bloomed, th. corn grew up in tho fieleh and the lime vrthered. I do not know whatuomee Into other lives; but I hope that Hee- ven give such a glimpse of happineats u mane to ell. On one occasion I heard the doctor hughlng an he talked to my mother. “a tsured her if aha know that in some part" of England tho beautiful frug- rant shrub known " aouthornwood wuvallod "lad'a love." My mothor re- ol’ed that she had never heard it so mulled, and asked why was it named "lul's love." I listened halt curious- ly for tho answer. "Because." he said. 'it dim in a year, as lad'a love often mm " He looked at me as he spoke. um] I knew that he was thinking of Mark’i love. which. after all. was a India low. and might lire for a year or die in a day. Bat he did not know. Be was old and immersed in the cares of a zrnvo profession. How (ould he under-sand our love. loyalty, andcort- gum-y? Rut. l. with' my warm deep love--" f-lt no tenr of death. Not even the stars in heaven lbone so brightly or - so true as my love. I mid to her thar [might die. hut that the lows tttat filled my whole soul never could. She looked " me with sad ave-ct eyes. When the aura shine in the night-sky her lwk and her words come luck to Dim evening Mark had gone h-ma; end loves, left me. and returned. He hut the stars were so bright that I could not leave me; I could not let remained out of doors, watching the him go. My mother said it was use- night sky. The dark blue vault “in less to prolong tho agony of parting. a mus of shining. twinkling gold. Mark looked at her with a white set They were so bright and clear, and the tamy. faint my~lival light they threw upon "I cannot, go." he said hoarsely. the Mirth was no dreamily beautiful! He had to leave Graoedieu by the that l “M entranced. lust train that evening and sail from ' Nellie." cried my mother, "do mine London on tho marrow. He had spent in: ' the whole of the previous day with us, “Munmn " I answered. "sou mine and he WM at the cottage early on this out!" morning of the last day. Outside the Almost to my surprise she came. and very glory of summer lay over the m- ntood together watching the rm- land. Wes stood Mitt-hing the gold- "T wonderful urine. on nun-shine with the chill of our part- “flms bright they are. thew lwauti- ing upon us, a chill more bitter than ful stare" said my mother. "Ah Nell- the chill of death. Mark had lowened “Hum bright they are. thew beauti- ful stare" said my mother. "Ah Nell- te how may thousand years have they Fee" shining! What lave they soon! lad. my darling. how soon tboy will he shining PP our Bung!" - l Bis two Crow white and . dark m- .dow came into khan; l "Nellie. just can. . little way with or has your trust; but 1 should like to, 11Prn Fou. Love with caution:" 'tThere' need to no mutton “hero Mer is oonwrned. mother." I rejoin- "I an old," the continued. "t have men . great deal of lilo. I do not tsay-Heaven forbid-that all men are tuba. or all women; I do not say that one sex is more false than the other; but I have seen lore betrayed, trust misplaced. I have known the honest bout of n mun broken because a wo- man deserted hun. and I have known a loving and tender-hearted girl die amuse her lover left her." “Sumo lavas." said my mother. "last forever. cane for a day; and oh, my dear Nellie, it spam to me that this but in, in those prosaic times. the commonest form of love." I nisod my face to the aura shining in their calm eternal twenty. Strong in my youth, ignorance. and faith, I miq_li¢htlyt _ "yothuiot that kind can ever trap- peteetssoen Mark and 112le .-» _ My mother looked at me :nxiously. I wonder how many mothers have giv- en to their daughters just the same tenable advixe. and just as much in vain? "Love fur a. day!” I eyhoed. "Ah thank Heaven that is not Mark'alosef." "Do you quite understand. Nellie," asked my gentle loving mother,"what I mean, what I want you to do? Mark in to bay absent four years. I do not my that thh love will change or grow loss; but I beg of you to leave yourself one chance. Do not give him such en- tire love. that if he should die or for- get you, or any circumMBntMsq should part you. your whole life would. be ruined. Love with caution, Nellie." "There is no need for caution with Mark!" cried my happy heart. lk, Mark my handmme lover, Imight give in stsirersrotsnu'tur'e the Itys ish love that filled my hunt; and the words of my mother's warning fell on headless oars. I van remember a warm day in Juno. sshen Mark and Iwught the shade of tlw tail trans that grew by the river. A refreshing Dream came user tho water, and Ute. birds were si- ient in the great In“. We were talk- ing of our marriage of that bright fu.. turo. whirh. like the June sunshine, had no shadow. Suddenly Mark asked "Pear heart. what fear!" I cried. Then in my turn I begun toexact a promiro. "You will love and think of me too, Mark!" "I shall think of no one also. Nell." "And you will not all say one else buntifnl, or--" Be interrupted me with . laugh. "Perhaps I should be happier if I could think loan of you, Nellie," he aid. "Mr life will be om mousing long- ing__for yon.'_' _ .. My noble Mark! My whole heart bow- ed down before him; be WM so brave, so gallant. so independent. as all true "srs do'ar hark." and my mother, "if you are to eauteh the six o'clock trgjp, Jt is time FAM? wet." _ - _ "Have you any relatives, Nellie? You and your mother seem quite alone in the world." I told him haw my home-duties and my love of nature of flowers. trees, and birds had filled my lite. I had lived then in the gray of the. twilight; I lived now in Lbs light of the glor- ious sun. "How little [dreamed that morn- ing that fair May morning! was to meet my fate!" said Mark. “Nellie, I shall never forget how Four hair (learned in the ,upshint" "Ours is a. very peculiar family," he said laughing. "We have some rela- tives on my mother's side who are very pour; they live in London. On my fa.- ther's side we have some distant ro- latives who are very rich; but we do not correspond with either. These rich people have I. title too; but I shall never trouble them. It ever I have a title it shall be through win- ning it: if ever [have a fortune I shall have made it." When the corn was out down. sad the ripe fruit gathered in from the orchards; when the "Iron and happy barley" lay under the siaths. Mark had -when the hour or parting came, I relieve Mark would have given up the appointment. with all its advantages, rather than leave me. Twenty times he kissed me with despairing passion 3nd love, left me. and returned. He could nut leave me: I could not let him co. My m=~ther said it was use- lessee to prolong tho agony of parting. I told tiim--truthruuy--that nun-th- er men were to me like shrdowa. away." I told him that my father was an only child, my mother also, and that I was tho same. The only relatives I had ever heard of were some distant (men in America; but I had none in England. - "it must have been lonely for you my] darling. letore 1farms,r' lo said_ "We were talking about relatives Mark." I said, "Have yqu many?" - I looked up at him with happy eyes: hirpruiso was po sweet to me. I never mailed that conversation, thou, few words, until I knew who Mark Irpton'n routing were. "That shall lie next my heart. Nell, oven " hen I am dead," he said. "Pre. mise me mm no hand but mine shall touch those golden curls of your: while I an may. You are very Inantiful Noll, although you do not seem to know anything about it: and men will admire you; bat you must not listen to than. You we mine, all mine- mine only." _ A . __ __ 77"1’7rtiniso me. Nell," be said as be kisserd my lips again and again." "that no one shall kid. you while I am i nir_t rain hair, and had cut off a lung shin- (“'H \ PTER I" ooG, mom we stood by the like trees: every flower was dead, but tin groan loves were there still. "I ahnit [one you here, my darling." said my lover in a low voice. "Isuzu be four years Away (mm you. Nellie. Promise me that “hen I return you will moot me here, in this same plaso. Bore, where I met the s“ootest love ever given to man-here I shall re- turn to claim my wife. Good-by. Nel- ie." "Good-br, Mark," I whispered. For one brief moment he put his fare on mine; he kissed my brow and my tips; for one moment. sweet and bit- ter in death. I lay with my head upon his breast; end then he was gone. There was tb blinding mist all around me, a. surging as of great waters in my ears. A sharp and bitter pain seem- ed to pierce my but; I felt my whole frame tremble. Then the blue sky. the green earth the trees and the river “ere all one. and I reeled and fell up- on the gram. I could not weep; I could not cry out. No word came to relieve. my dumb anguish and despair. me" 1'. add. "Let our list (unwell be spoken wbm we first. met." "Oh, (h Id, be warned," said my mo- ther that evening, "be warned! You must not give to any creature the love that helongs to_0ne only." A 7 I lived through it--through the rest of the long bright days, through the sunny evenings. the mornlit nights. For some weeks I had no companton save despair. I wept whenever I was fume, but I dated not let my mother know how sorely I grieved. There was nothing to Le done but weitin patience as lest tcould. Ev- ery morning hope revived in my heart; every evening it died. Every morn- ing I rose praying wildly to Heaven that I might hear from Mark that day: every night I lay down toeleep with Litter tears hemuse a letter had not mme. Every morning, week af- ter week, month after month. Inent upto the gate to meet the postman. He never had anything for me. He knew that I wanted an Indian letter, and he would look at me with n piteous shake of the head and pass on. Bat amy morning when the snow lay on the ground end the bells were chim- ing the postman name. He bade me no cheery "Good-morning" es heplec- ed the letter in nu bends end hastened away. He - what had betellen me. Inside the envelope was my lest letter tm Indie. returned to use through Four years. four long dreary years I mast wait, but than was hope at bhry end. He would come again. my bravo young lover. My mother help- ed me by setting me to work. Icoud make so many beautiful things for my future home. in tour years, aha said. I could paint; lcould do abundred thing; that. would fill the time, and I should know that I was working for him. _ One whole year passed by. En cry mail brought me a letter. a glowing love letter and I was growing happy again. Only three years to wad; now until I should we Mark under the Mass again! Then clouds began to gather. br. Upton, who, although he had laughed at us as young lovers. had at- ways been very kind to me. died sud- denly. He fell down in the street, and was carried home senseless. He never spoke again. He died the same owning, to the grief and distress of evggy one who knew him. Mark felt his father's death krenly. lie wrote to me more lovingly than over. He said that I was all that he had in the world now, and that ha must, if he could, love me even more. Three years had passed. I remind- ed myself every hour in the day that 1 had but one more year to wait. Mark's letters were full of love, full of eagerness and hope. He had been prosperous beyond expectation. He had never missed writing to me. until a day came when the indian mail brought me nothing from him-not a word, not a line. It was the first time suvh a thing had occurred. and my mother tried to comfort me. The next mail brought me a. letter. but the one after that did not, and my confidence was gomr--I no longer felt sure that by every mail I should have news from my lover. Lure the charp thrust of a sword. an idea came to me one day that the letters were shorter and colder. I hated myself for my miser- able tatwy. How dared I think such treason of my lover Mark? Then in the month ot October my mother died, and after that the Indian mail brought me no more news of Mark-not a sin- gle_line. _ _ _ When Christmas tame I was still waiting. in dry-eyed, mute anguish. for the letter that I was never to re- mive. I wondered often that golden hair of whieh my lover had been so proud had not turned gray. I was helpless in my great grief. I wrote to Mark. I told him that my mother Waft dead and that I was alone in the cottage, waiting for him-that neither his silence nor almanac. Shook my faith. He might be ill: an a-cident might have happened to him-anything, ev- erything would I helieve, except that he had forgotten me. I never thought of that; it never occurred to me as a solution of the mystery of his ailenzre. There was no one to whom I tould appeal for new» of Mark, Histather was; dead; the motor of Graoedieu had not heard from him for many months; the lawyers who had forwarded the money realized by the »ale of his fa- ther's property had not rewind any earnmuniration from him since he had so!“ the formal receipt for it. There was no one in Gra1miieu who knew his present address. 7 y It was in May that the donor died, and for one your afterward mery- thing went on as of old. I had but but two years more to wait. 'lime paused more quickly. Only two years! My mother had cared to warn me. She said no more to me ukout caution in love. I thought deeply over my plans. It warned uanoss now to lent e therottatpr, it was host for me to remain there un- til Mark come home again. Our old and faithful servant, Dorothy Clarke,was sufficient protection for me. I had money enough for one year, and I had my little income of twenty pounds per nnn'um also. 1 had ttrmght once of going away. but whither should I Bo-- what could I do? And I must be here when Mark returned. My mother never knew that. agrent cloud had overshadowed me. She did not know tint my heart was break- inf because had no news from Mark. let. me an it quickly. My dear mother was buried, and I was alone in the world. save for my lover so far awar---tslono, save tor him, and when July ot tho next year should come, the four years would he ended. and he would return. rr.15F,. Irtg?,h"7a “Smoking of the "omnambuliat," said the Cheerful Idiot, "he " [out is no idle dreamer." The Poet-"Whirh of my poems do you think is the but?" she--" Invert read tint one yot." Bho-"Mr. Footelightly doesn't look like to actor does het" He--NIo; and he doesn't Bet like one, either.” the Dead-Letter ofrtcm, and on it m written in n offiu’ul hand. "60.. awtt-1att no address.” plainant's tux-keys?" Colored Prisoner --"Ho bad no chickens. Four Honor." Miss EtNrt--"I wonder if that gentle- mpg fan ttetrt me “my; k sing? Mald Eles-"Mr heart is on fine mit late for you!" She. ooldlr-"vei1, as dare is no inzuranco you hat pettarr put dot fire oudt." --"0t course but; can. He ia (5an; tha window already." "Those new neighbors seem to be great lorrowers." "Borrowesf One night when they gave a. dinner they borrowed our family album." Pationms--'nvbst is the cheapest- looking thing you ever saw about a. bargain countbr?" Patrimr--"A bus- hand waiting for his wife." Ho Wouldn't Do.-.. Friend - “Wouldn't you like to have me sit here and Show at the poets when thor come int" Editor-"No. You are too poor 9. shot." Wulio..-"Maantntr, an people leave parts of themselvea in different places?" "No; dnn’t be ridiculous!" "Well, Uncle Thm said he was going to South Africa for his lungs." Henry Yalierby--Aftais xse's mar ried will tub chicken fob diumsh obery dat. 11oper_. - - _ Brown-"1M you know that tho ma- jority of physi -ians are comparatively poor men? ' Joneas-"No, I wasn't aware of that; hut I know some ot them are awfully poor doctors." sueiindaVohnso.--ott, yo' (Jetty ! But I wouldn't ask yo' to run no sick risks tah nth “he. Auuurr--'N'hai. do you think of my new book?" Friend--"" certainly con- tains much food for thought." Author -"Do you really think so?" Friend-- "Yes; hut it seems to have been wretchedly cooked." Penis are subject to countless di- seases A moderate heat in suffil-ient to tnnsl’urm them to a heap of ashes sad if they no accidentally brought into the proximity of I." acid they lo- come irretrievalrly ruined. They are (busily broken, and, when frequently worn. mule lose their lustre. "Want a situation as orrand-bor, do strut Well. can you tell me how far the moon is from the earth. eh?" Boy -."Wesli, guv'nor, I don't know, hut. I reckon it ain’t near enough to inter- fere with me running errands.” He got the job. "Oh, my friends, there are some spoof Moles that one never forgets'." said a lecturer, after giving a graphic des cription of 5 terrible accident he had witnessed. "I'd like to know where they sells 'em," rmnarked an old lady in the audieawo who bi always mislay- ing her glen-res. A boy basing asked to describe a kitten said; "A kitten is remarkable for rushing like mad at nothing what- ever, and stopping lefore it gets there." It must have been the same boy who thus defined mandalt "It in when nobody ain't done nothing and somebody goes and tells.” Fuddy-"Talk Mont saving woan I suppose my wife is the most ecom- mivnl woman going." Duddr--"What, has she been doing now?" Ifuddr--"she has been wanting a new cloak, and the other day she said. 'I wish I had fifty dollars to get that, cloak with!' Then she thought a. moment. and added. 'No Iwon't lo extravagant. I wish Ihud forty dollars. Perhaps I might he able to got it for that.' Now, that’s what T tall economy." Although it may seem add it is no less true that the moat precious gems are subject to various dimers. which frequently destroy their lustre and beauty One of the must wmmon disewvs of jewels is an inclination to change their original onlor. Although it is gener- ally believed that emeralds, sapphires and rubies are not sihjez-t to this change. recent experiments have es- tnhlished the proof that these stone. are liable to fade. Gnrnets are found to fade very rapidly and faded garnets and rubies ”sumo I. pale and misty wartime. Mnny gems often without any ap- puent cause suddenly become crack- ed ac seemed, the damage being 'ar- yond repair. Opals, knnwn as the un- luckiest stoma. are ID sensitive that their bounty is frequently destroyed by thnir wearer’s proximity to an open fire. The lustre of this shine is naus- ed by the presence of myriad: of little fissures which deflect the light into the eharacterintie prismatic colors of the gem. The tiniest of theta. fissures in likely at any moment to destroy the A young oolomrd philosopher W“ em- ployed in one of our stores " a salary of $350 a week. He told his employer one morning that be was about to leave, having got a letter place. "A better place?" echoed his employer; "what, wngas are you to get!" "Three dollars a wwk." "But that is not so much as you got here." "No," said the boy; "but than it's belt” to do less and not trot an much than to do morw and not got enough." Among the Reasotta,-"You tsnioy coaching. do you? I never could see where the Qua mum in. One lookaso like a. darned fool, sitting up on a three-.story much and cavurting over the highway to the tinting of a horn." "I know it, but it isn't every darned fool that ran afford itt" Juaro-"Why did you steal the com- WIN'EER IVRINKLES. DISEASES OF' JEWELS To Bs Continua ONTARIO ARCH TORONTO TRUE LOVE WISash and Door Factory. 539:5 ‘0- Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepare! to PILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock it, large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the dint. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that All order! van be filled, Lumber, Shingles and Lath away: In Stovk. REMOVED THE (llllMihllfl REHABKABLE SURGICAL OPERA.. TION IN ST. LOUIS. Br. Ber-ay- l’erfnrm goo-whit Exam.- of Ike Stomach ot round Berk, Who altered from (tanner - Berk 'tce-ered from Ike upon”... but Wu Too be- blllulecl to IA". What was regarded at St. Louis. as tho greatest. surgical operation of the use was performed at the Rebekah llotr. pital last Wesdaosday morning. and the fact that it gum pmmiso of complete success was mslxmsihle for the dis- closum of the details. lt was the an ri>ion of thus amine stomach of Conrad Back. a. machinist., 46 years old, of St. Louis. “I have three or tour times in who yearn otasrated an cues in which the remm’ll of the entire staunch might have resulted in a, cure, but never have had ihe knowledge nN-esmry to war- rant me in the quantum and bare also lacked in mmmge. The. recent ~uc- cesrdut -erstion by Dr. Schluuer in Zurich gave I» some- encourupruwnt and furnished a precedent, but the 0p- eratiun. in my ol inion. based upon the experimue of Wednesday morning, will novel- hex-1m a mmmnn one. It is xasctuuut.1r 1iiiticutt of performance and requlm gram rewutrefulnesa and endurzgme on we part of tlte ~urgeun mini hiss assistants. "The operation Imteql two hours and six minutes. It was some“ hut differ- ent. from Submitters. The patient is “It was mm-h when" he :3"; "to indlmlad that he'd who his hmakfun join thetends of the jejunam and 9mm- this moraine in the old In. if you was because that (primes of them fit-’ please." led with murh more nrety. But the! -----_---- umrer orifire at tle prioris being iil greater dimearioms than Ibo lower and. . . ' of the esophagus, the junctiun in the F'rUPPLt LIMIT ED. optyrstimt on Kirk “as necemmity il Mm. Brmhlr--Gootkia. what part task of greater diffieuity." at the. turkey do you prefer? Itat the continuity of the e1-l Two Boards“, in 'shor--T'he breast. ont'l loom can“ was matoeed brl In. Reahlr--Pm sorry, an!“ up at". but... the "lod- Iodibutth'lhnnt. mama "rd. DOING FA1HLY “TILL. in fact, the ddawr of shock tusd hem- orrhage in now over, and if I). does not gel well it "ill be from the impos- siléf'ilyqu properly nourishing Mini" qua. Dr. Floyd explains that Dr. Schlattnr must have expvriencod lea: difficulty in concluding his operation thee did Dr. lkrnaygi in finishing his. "On “'ednesdly (naming iorrased; the abdomen in the noun! may, and up- on examination of the stomach it was found that the major . an etum was not involved at all, that the disease was lo-, cubed along the minor cunnlure. and! that it extended the whole length from: the eaoehagua to within an inch of the pylorus. This Utter outlet of the ptomach was entirely free from disease. It was found that all of the organs ex- cepting this small portion of about one inch would have to he removed in order to give the patient achanoa to get well. This operation was done. and the lower and of the esophagus was united to the pyloric endor outlet of the sum. The difference between the St. Louis operation and Dr. Swhiatter'ss is in the fact that. the Swiss physician warned the pyloris- and effected a suture be- Lwasn the upper end of the jejunum and the lgwer our-sanity 9f the esoph- la several ways the apex-sum was more arduous and complirawd than (he dimilar and successful undertaking at Zurich. Switzerland. on Sept. 6.1897, of Dr Carl Schlatber. who removed the when: stomach of Am I .undis. . work- ing woman, 63 years old. Each opera- tion was impelled by vant'emus growth that (new the patient's Life. CANCER OF THE STOMACH. Py amen hemorrhages and pain, and by inadequate digestion. all caused by the Cameron; tumors, the patient “as much roduood in strength. and had lost about 27 puunuLs in weight. Dr. Summit thought that its the tumor had not given rim to obstruction. I remov- al of the growth could he attemptwl. tt was thought that only I portion of the stomach was involved. Beck was the first. man in the world io tubmit to such an undertaking. Hr. A. C. Bernays. who performed the "o- author: is one of the must. eminent nur- “an: ir the West. He WM again-ed 3., Hrs. Robert E. Wilmon, Frank M. Floyd. tad Spanner Graves. Dr. Ber- nays gave out acurefully prepared statement. of the Itti'ie as follows: "The patient. WM sent me for open- uon by Dr. Summa, " ho had diagnusod the (no as an incurable W. G. &J. McKECHNIE esophagus. Book was -tain-1 with (no 5600041 nourishment; The surgeon doclu'o the cancerou- mwth Ind " taimd such extent than wu not tho slightest hope of Bock! memory ho- tom the operation. Thu history ofBsks meni- “moat the urn-e as that ot Am: moan. 8b.. too, was nourish“ by Injections. AG ter I while, however. she resumed ub- img in the. ordinary nunnor. and on Oct. ll irsft had. Dr, Sellh‘ber oom- sum! two hours mud a but in his operation. - _ __ - Labor. Bock died mm Fridsy night. The saw any the operation wn "svertl.eteaa a. aviq-ntiil- 'riumph. the patients debilitated “audition slung trustrating pol-anneal: swam "He. ttaytl Um! wuy for About 19. days. ()r-limuily was mad Io put hin nged for him an top of an initial cage 50 that he wouldn't have In Ital down man- ' . ht or ten feet. but In couldn't (ii-earn! mm. So we met a ring in the "3an pole eighteen feet from the (mun-L um] me mod to rmw. a run through that and make nae and Cant to the hark-l with his food or thick in it. and Ma, it up tad M him eat them. Un up: road we sued to throw that row over the crown of a tree. It I. mum. bright. For M. entry into the great tent at mow um. We had to out, a - tglit. in the van- vw; but, we didn't regret that. ho- cam- it was a mighty inn-remix. thi to see him marvh’ in in (bu may. If made him look (bins-nix fa! all in- tstead ‘0! eighteen. m It; Cir-I'm rude. . “Id. It“ thrtttr. I. In I“. "8m to m I hold. you ooas," said am old cirrus mwn. "than the srirtsfio having I m Luna” It is u serious thatth for my giraffe to have u so" that)“. bad for the giraffe and bud for the owmr. When you oome w take in eighteen-foot giraffe :iku "ttrWr, . none {ha-out mm [urge ehpenM, and I large mm mm of trouMe; an! the hi; terilow hadn't mam-’n gut mar this Inu- tore summing els, happened to him that, gave UN men mum trouble. [in caught cold, and the, cold ml tlad i- his tluvat--l uuppms he wu all” tN5tV ttitivey tutr-usd it gave him at stiff wk. no that be muldn't hand his neck "Yau can't have any idea what . stiff wk lu'tlln¢ until you son a gir- affe afflicted in that way; “e'nl had all norm of (roublo with Animals in on. way and lumbar. but. for an! haunt this beat an all. We dbnoousmd it one day 'at this mud. The giraffe tri- wnya duck-ad his hand under the bran-1h as that hung dawn, and of ' . am“ or n goons does, but chin dar any“. hi. head right up naught. in HM bit he brought up against. a bran-h that Wm " [out (“won feet above the ground. That was such an manning china that w. knew "omerttiutr mun. he the author. and when the nirnfto’n keeper mun up and "poke bo Mm, ngtd Ll ll. did Win to tuna] his mm down. “I! look dow n, why, " aw uncouldn'b bond his wk. und men we know WHAT WAN THE MATTER. "We”. of mum. the limit thin I. did wan to not a nun to much slou- aides of him with a mm. polo with . crutch in tin rn-l at it to an. t.tn brill‘hul tor him. Moot of lb limo. almost all cm time. u fut, we oouid "not handout d overhanging bunch- "Write I tiny I mun umd to “a up on I ladder an: put a "trap lr-auml bin had. and u At hook . n A full with g bo'aun'n chair. and 1 man “(mid ride dawn his nwk and ruh in linim-nt. He and to like than very mum, and it helped him greatly, (on; .1414 -n« morning win: me man went um to give him the usual rub they were de- lighted to use the. old champ with hi. head down puny our In Line roof at thm grizzly bur om, whim stood next to him, whirl: alum-ed that his mark WI; . around nll right, and BI“ UtMratod tint he'd Inks his breakfast “is will“ in the uld war. if you plea-c." a, and of nouns lots of the WI] than mm long sluts-hes where there wasn't any tram at all; ant Hen wa‘d can. to Moves when the man would luv. to lift I .DMW'h u, let (In My aim“. go under; unl " great pity it. was, too. to Ae" Lim ”unwind w go about ia that manner. M. ull A CIRCUS YARN. "

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