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SE IRRRSSS PRT TY & Se cpa We eth THE WORLDi SATURDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 13, 190e. : : EVENING —ae eee Reed ’ “by the Press Publishing Company, No. & to @ fk Row, New York. Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. .NO. 18,089. ee —— Ss nl THE MAN HIGHER UP. {JOKES OF THE DAY} “T reag that during the ‘L’ tie-up the assengers indulged in much railiery.” 3 249400 0645004 SANTA CLAUS FA VICTIM OF THE TRUSTS. 90-4 OOt 924620090446 0654OO9O6-H6 3 Lorenz is due in New York to-day to begin his of orthopedic surgery to the rellef of the: “Third-raillery, I suppose.” le cripples who have long awaited his coming. Since ‘arrival from abroad this celebrated surgeon has set! | of dislocated femurs in place and brought the use deformed little imbs to as many children pa- disabled by birth or by accident in Infancy. to this country by a wealthy Chicagoan anxious his deformed daughter cured at any price he has) fhown himself a rare example of the good physician, as ty to heal the children of the poor as of the rich re- less of monetary reward. 7 “tt has been related in this column how the accident Van irritating skin disease, a form of eczema, turned from regular surgery to the so-called blood | ‘Wess ‘kind. His method is revealed in the description ‘of the operation on Nellie Sykes, a little girl of Wal etree nt game nenr- © . @uffering from hip disease, The report of Nellie's' signtea people mistake him for Secre- Says that tary Shaw." the hip joint was a large projection caused by the head ‘Aistocated femur pressing against the flesh, There és a corresponding depression in the groin, deep and discol- red “with the surrounding flesh shrunken and unnaturad in app . A series of rapid, deft turns and twists and by the surgeon and then he paused. Ho hold the leg band and pointed with the other to the spot where the tion had been apparent. The spectators then saw | the culminating point of the operation. The ugly protrusion “R ; the depression beside it was gone, too, and except Aiscoloration of the flesh the entire hip appeared Ike the other. Is not this the work of our old friend “the natural "Pone-setter” risen to a place of authority? No knife, me chloroform, no antiseptic solution, only supple fin- gers, skilful and strong, a giant’s strength with a wo- ‘@an’s tenderness. Thirty minutes of “longitudinal | manipulation ” a quick, firm pull, the snapping of the me into vlace with a click distinctly audible to the a drink 18 at a drug store, 1 medical purposes. pct and the cure is effected without the cutting of ht the only place on earth then | where Hquor’a a drug on the market.” Our ancestors had awful times, so say the old-time books, Asdodging Mnjuns, wolves and bears that lurked in hidden nooks. ‘And we, In this safe century, sneer at | their frightened folly; dodge naught eave subway blasts, the auto and the trolley For Teacher—Johnny, have you been vac- inated? Johnny—No'm; but ma made me put flannels on this morning, and they itch just as much.—Chicago Record-Herald. “Papa, does Santa Claus ever come to “She eayn a strange man met her on the road and kiesed ber." “Oh, she's always boasting something.’ about Briggs—Since Cawker has given up his Mte of dreadful dissipation he is look- ing worse than ever. Griggs—Yes. Some girl he ts making love to Is trying to reform h m.—The New Yorker. Theat “Absence makes the heart grow fonder’ One has no reason to expect. You'll find, if on the theme you ponder, That “presenta” have the same effect. “In Maine the only place you can buy and for What an advance this means from the old times when ‘the surgeon's knife was out on the slightest provoca- Te seen the new book on the “Have ¥ ‘ | Boer War m-it bled Washington for a cold and killed! “Yea, T bought a Kopie." } and bled Byron for a fever with fatal result. Even | ae rw” in Glens Falls whose local reputation for in it, unless you've got it out. was very high and who numbered New Yorkers | ee “his patients. He claimed an even greater per- | , of cures than the 40 per cent. attributed to Dr. | ; Some years ago a blacksmith from Wngland ' cures in New. York by a method rudely re- i that of Dr. Lorenz. Prof. McEwen, of Glas-' gatnea in America, 1s atill lying at cured by this means nearly a generation ago, What Terrletta, N. Y. ‘popular opinion fs of bloodless surgery 1s shown by GPRRY, ELBRIDGE T.—has just riven reat growth of osteopathy. ‘The institution founded the town of Delhly N. PEER att Me, Mo., by a Virginia physician in 1874 had 00 cases on its books as treated up to 1897 and its BATig) SCR DEAD canierrant @ubsequent expansion has made it one of the main in-! jouse, with a restaurant planned to ) Gustries of the town, a source of considerable municipal, excel anything of the sort in that : city's history. FLEMING, CANON-says Tennyson told him he wrote “Crossing the Bar’ COLORS THAT IRRITATE. | in ten minutes. Most men would have _ News comes from Washington that Miss Alice Roose-| peen stranded in the middle and forced it was particularly displeased with the decoration of to whistle for @ tum Froom in yellow and blue and that in accordance with MORGAN, J. P.—won the mathematics ‘a | prize for three consecutive years while EELS ks seem aa | @ pupil at the Boston High School. one A pronounced liking for certain colors and an equally’. ivqw gmcRETARY-Is having tho intense dislike of others is common to most persons. It — gutside of the Treasury Bullding at it be thought that the eye with its capacity for dis- scrubbed clean of the wishing a hundred thousand different hues, and e nty or more tints and shades of each of these, would Mnot be 50 sensitive regarding particular colors. But from earliest times it has been believed that red was the iniversally favorite color. It is known to be so among od and glimpses of apartment-house wallpaper in |New York show how civilization regards it. © Bome doubt was cast on this belief by a popular vote gen at the Chicago World's Fair. In answer to re- oreey SOMERODIES. | BLACKWELL, MRS, BLIZABETH— who was the first woman minister or- ene : Washington stains of age. LETTERS, QUESTIONS, ANSWERS. Two Dates. To the Editor of The Evening World sold in this country. It he effect will be c Claus's packs in th years to \ J PLEASE, MISTER CAN HHAVE A FEW TOYS FOR THE / =) Poor aN ¢ HILOREN i :) POOR OLD SANTA CLAUS. WONDER WHAT'S THE MATTER with Him? A Toy Trust {s orcanizing, which will own and control over sixty | been toy factories whose plants turn out 95 per ecu will have nov well he predict The Jolly Saint’s Sad Plight Pictured by Artist Kahles. neretofors . of all the toys made and | baby al of $10,000,000. Just what but it is Nkely that Santa ae horse and the satiboat which th come won't be quite so full as they have ve sure and leave for them,—News Item, WELL THIS 15 TOUGH! TO THINK THAT AFTER HOLDING DOWN MY Jow FoR OVER 400 YEARS | SHOULD CQmE TO Tris! i KICKED OUT BY THE CANDY TRUST ON,Lo'Wway Bark! YouRE Tou Goud TO THE CHILOREN REQuiRED! Whe gu) —_—_—_—E=eeee SITUATION WANTED NICE OLD GENTLEMAN (7, WISHES A JOB AT ANY G4 THING HAVING BEEN FoRceDg OUT OF BUSINESS BY THE TOY AND CANDY TRUSTS — senev SANTA CLAUS » 74 i ¢ aN HERE'S WHERE WE CO TO THE SAUSAGE ; that many a little girl will write in vain for a doll, a nda picture book, and that scores of toddling youngsters will look in vain Christmas morning for the train of cars, the hobby % told Santa Claus in their prayers to | (Ger OuT ormist YOUR SERVICES! /ARE NO LONGER a ANDY bs ofan advance than that made by the doctor in! @roker—Why are you leaving Wall | ‘ ensing with drugs. | street? Don't you think there's any a year ago that Col. Partridge couldn't run the New i j money In ie oO | Yorls police force. They never will get 2 man who can ers to Lake George will remember a “natural! gyorn tam hh, yes. Most of mine's 2 run it the way it ought to be run unless they appoint $ 2] SHE LOVED HIM. ———_* A By Charles Garvice. DID PARTRIDGE FALL OR——? “ SEE Partridge has quit,” remarked the cigar store | man. “I don't blame him,” said The Man Higher Up. “It's a case of did he fall or was he pushed, J think he was pushed. There's one thing about the old man that we haye to take off our hats to, He stood pat until he was solid for his year's salary before ha gave his two weeks’ notice.” “He was a good man,” commented the cigar store man. “So is Dr. Parkhurst a good man,” replied The Mam Higher Up, “but he'd be a heel at the head of the police force. It don't take a highly moral individual to be the head of the police force. A man who reads the Bible every Sunday and says his prayers before he goes to bed at night is all right in his way, but he is a light-welght when !t comes to handling 7,000 policemen, “Partridge was the Handy Andy of the Reform Ad ministration. You remember Handy Andy? very time he dealt the cards there were five aces in the deck, and the players danced an Irish fling on his chest. Every time Partridge made a move the City Club slammed him on the basement of the pants with a slapstick, and Capt. Norton Goddard smote him over the bald head with a bladder, He was a man who did the best hq could, but it would take a man with the combined knowledge of everybody, from Moses to Andrew Caw negie, to run the Police Department to sult the gang that thinks it elected Mayor Low. “The mistake the Mayor made when he appointed q Commissioner of Police was not to get a man from Schenectady or Troy, or some other canal port. Then he would have had a chance to back out. Instead he took a man from Brooklyn, who used to run the Brook« lyn police force, and when he got in up to his neck he couldn't back out. He had to let the chorus of thd hammer swingers keep busy until your Uncle John ug in Mulberry street had played his year out. “You didn't have to write it down and have it printed a@ policeman. Nobody but a policeman knows police- men. The average cop is the wisest guy that ever gota free shine. And they'll never get a man, whether he’s « a policeman or not, who can run it to suit the men who are running Mayor Low. “T was talking to you yesterday about the compromise they made on the Sunday excise question. This 1s the whole excitement. When you get a body of men sworn to enforce the law as it stands, and tell them that they don't have to enforce all of it, you get a body of law enforcers that acts like a gang of supes in a big pro+ duction when the supe captain forgets his cue. “Partridge didn’t know what was the matter with the police force. Mayor Low don't know what's the matter with the police force, but he has a better idea of it than the men who are trying to tell him how to run it. “I know quite a few cops. For six months they have been standing on their heads. They didn’t know whet was going to happen. The strong play the reform ad ministration made when it went in was that it would cut out every pull in the department. Col. Partridgy went to work along that line, but he didn’t have aid balancing pole with him. “He put the kibosh on some of the grafters, but bd didn’t get the main squeezes. Ho reduced a lot of mem y who were on the level and he kept a lot of men iq power who are as crooked as the Harlem River. Ha put military men in direct charge of the department and made the cops sore. A man with a bay window that won't allow him to see whether there !s mud of his shoes or not, who has spent half his life in stoppimg “ runaways, making rescues at fires and pounding a bead in all kinds of weather, gets as irritated as a sore ey! 4,556 voters dropped cards in a box expressing | When aid Maria Edgeworth die? Also. | when he begins to deoasine thet they are trying to malt } Preference in colors and the surprising informa- | Longfellow? A.M. M. ’ a West Point cadet out of him. ‘ f Was gained that most preforred blue, with red ay Marla Eaxeworth dled May 21, 1319, A STIRRING ROMANCE OF ONE WOMAN’S HEART. ‘po you think that Mayor Low will kot a Ptice Cony ongfellow died March 24, 1882. = aie _ —— = — é : . i Helose sécond. The colors least in favor were yellow and | '"! low a : a aoe o— — — © | missioner who can make a i000 police force?” ask porange. Concerning the wide popularity of red Grant} atid AYNOPSI8 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS — deed nis wife, that he conceaied the fact] “IT dtd not know he was Lord Ley-|went over ¢o the countess, who had} the clgar store man. : hsays that it is partly due to the fact that red is) 7, oh bates os aie Ciyde Leyton tae secretly married Wetle | cro all—from me, whom he intended | ton. is name was ne nd 1-1 loved sak into ae) bein comletaly Gis “He may,” replied The Man Higher Up. “Tf he for A . A ikuaertt {Aw quite: § OF, ORE fied rying to-morrow,"’ nim too well to do him ha a Pd, a th clasped hands R . a color of sc many of the frults especially prized by | cigarette smoking Stop my growing nt ery, and raised] tried to save him from the disgrace and | and pale face. “She 1s your son's wife,"” gets that the people want lim, and not the City Club, ta q ni | Dues It also give « peraon short b Lat her and then at/ruin he had incurred by marrying one |sild tho duchess in a low votce, “and| run the city he won't. Tf he can find a former mate om @ é Dee The influence of colors on humanity as well as on In-| 7 vat ae ay Clyde so fur beneath him, Lady Ethel made aialls 8 noble hearted girl” coasting schooner who {3 wearing a uniform he hag yi ; Clearette smoking Is heileved pany “ ae 6 oi brea plain to deed Was no! “What am [4 y you, Sad ” Bamimate nature was long aso recognized, It is knOWD| gvvntists to Manes ne wtowti | =e eee re ene Ee rarer ie eae aaenalt Mee rar |Gliwie mld te piles i Messe got a line out to make a good stagger. fhat seeds germinate most rapidly under violet and blue} can be no doubt tat it eauses Pa aegiah Neat were | best that T should xo, but—but"—she | of gratitude. Were 2nd the hatching of silk worms has been expedited | breath a Toubt that this te my wifey” /lanced with a faint ghudder toward) “Nothing,"" she sald, b TURKEY’S POLICE SPIES, ‘ vy you doubt that is ‘ ' ‘ ges under Vv et S8. a . 1 ¥ Lad. thel-"E did not know that— have too much to say to your hfe. i. hs sputting the eggs under violet gla he “blue Nght; AH. Re 4 Condensed from Charles Garvice’s novet [maid Clyde, holding Be Ue eae coull not say MoM ical | What ao vou aveanves oe wite.| mor aples Turkey beats the world," said John H. Helgi of a quarter of a century ego is siill fresh in the} To the Bitiior w fhe Hveulas We Hl oved Sim." by permission Of Fife fonrad that ee mMbEht escape WM eet tore tut all present! "Take any wife ham respondea | of St. Paul, to a Pittsburg Gazette reporter “T know 80} jes of those in middie life. At the time of its} The HIM tas a be ' If he loosed her the very least. “W could finish the sentence Clyde, his face fushiiug; and he srode| thing about sptes,"" he continued, “but there are more starter at the bridge rig hte 9 b ge Munro's Son n ode said 4: ne. ve 7 c! rou i Ta 0 ™ Bret 'Ponza, director of a lunatic avylum'in the| eric weach capream trainin out bes] CUrsnes. 9B By Georee fomey [Annihe Rode sald ts true, Wo we sa drew Bosse toward her, | across the room and got her bonnet and| them to the square mile in the land of {he pi dreaa C, ont, found that melancholy and taciturn patients! hind Bast N wk locale neatly every CHAPTER X. [OER ER AU the eso Hemet CRALE iY? et her come to me," she sald to| Jacket. would Imagine could ei, aye ie nites kative after th hour tine, ¢ st that fellow has EN eEO ACTS ‘ ' dle; and he let xo reluctantly.| ‘The duchess nodded approvingly. dently growing. Why, there are sples, and spies on plea Beapreanouih) kale) A(ten three: hours’ conllpement BEVERLY ROAD. An Unexpected Witnens. Besste’s hand mace a slight movement arty ear, 1 think It Is the strangest,| ‘Yes, that # Dest. You could tave| and spies on the sples of spies without any end, as far/a red chamber, oe . : P to her: bosom, i saddest y t story I ever] stayed here, but your phan ds best." She | Could learn. ———— - They Want Their rece Hack. oat 2 let ute sath SORE nerd ( aa you ce Hrisen ed nie sald TAIN Ty ava, You sterificed your happiness”—| took Bessie's hand and kissed her. ‘Phis| “There the ap cornmisat ainauels svn one, end eversoea , E To the Bait ning World ne SONtINUGL ASAT (eRhel when Nese BYE seemed for a moment as tf she could] has been very dreadful, my dear; but| dlstrusts everybody else, Every foreigner is unde CHILDREN s ashy _ his rue friend and myaeit] 9V Rode, ‘hough T did etn her | 4 trled to tell you a seore Of Ge oy on, and Besalo hing hor head—| mind, I don't think you have been blame. | Vélllance, und he cannot be In conversation in the street Bumber of minor news happenings of recent o¢-} besume acquainted with (wo young mien, to conuclonianess: aid tn “% times, sal, “but you would Mtl ycrinced your good name for the| less! What you did was very noble, but| without unexpected ears being strained In his direction, Fot have revealed children in an unfavorable light! Whom we write a few let ers wh le} found her marth centiticate tv ston erday— But 1 unter sake of the man you loved. You are a 1d we all have to suffer] two months, wherever I went, I was subjected to annoy they ets ce ALM. ; We ure no longer} bosom if peas ' cos is and ; turn ie aah suesenh Tee nentleace aman tet vauktavelbeen folly, What ent a worn who dec{ance by knowing that strangers were listening to mb ‘and friends and wish to ha now,” she added, pointing to Be trae that you went down to Len- | : say you have acted! celves her lawful husbi inquiring Into my business. Once while T was sipping a : : i ag what you may, I say you have a ss her lawful husband expect put] {na meme matter of fact it 1g as natural for the normal|turned. Now should w As ahe ceased she movell Arh ha that woman’ sald nobly, but—ah, my dear, very, very fool-| trouble? of coffee with an old New York friend whom I was deligh hild to tell untruths as it is for him to romance and LULU door, and, those near tt making way fi looked at him: haugh Ishty.* “Duchess! ald Glyde, reproachfully,| to meet, I noticed a long-nosed, sharp-eyed, big-cared sneal fictitious adventures and descrite horses with |, y Kies ana eal ere es a ¥On eA passed out, and was wven no] but her eyes sank before his stern a Tessie covered her face with her|and drawing Besste's arm within his, aa| of mixed biood and several languages, standing nearby, quite otters; or, better sill, ask one of your! more. cusing ones . If to protect her sheseel(evidentiviilateninw: tous: e fancies he has seen, G; = i « * hands, f to protect her from even the Duchess's| ¢vid iy ae h Ne are in ; Prof. G. Stanley} parents to write for them By this time a crowd consisting ot the | «yy iy true,” she sald, but in a low. | nay at eould 1 do? she wald, piteously| Kind rebuke, iiGbano Here /and’ take. a: seat [?-you, want to’ hear) Tiagal | ummmaer coe, result (of cleeryationa ofichildren: 1n A Brooklyn Hospital. dveal bridesmatds and the servants, 1n-| strained volce, “1—T endeavored to do] 1) aimost inaudibly; "I—loved him.” i's true; she has acted fool-| to him Ina loud yolce, but he paid no attention and kept bit that To the Baltor of Tue Krening World esaieariy All: Mie Moy senele HAC oey. | mae outs; ‘The duchess's eyes grew molst place Just as though he hadn't heard me. That fellow hung form of the habit of lying {s so prevalent 2 TASC ROAECOEIRGNEVOTRNC’RRE IT eee ee ener we ened nioralee aX ou ay Jown there whon my back} ie what da this about your having ralsed ‘her head. around me for weeks. : MUMS ekiat iiiuairationa of iUineara trite, ‘Thorovete lyn? C.3t A, | this strange acene. snd—and drove her into} 4) has i ts right, Clyde,” whispered,| ‘The best way over there Is always to speak loud, oom p SRE Sere UONA am trite, Thorough: PRA C. : once more the duchess was the i nli—the whole con-| We “ ; 1 Ay Setar fe truthfulness comes hard and Jate and school Ute 4s Ko t Hospital, No. 8 Lavings: | (ee oot eee ee tcposeenslons V soo tt allthe whole con-) “wa trick!” sald Lady Bthel, scorn- SHS Garliiiaw seined sowetirer| ecermien che on Papers On tr ad Cente eae ML Of teroptutions to falsehood that an honest child J {ts| ton #ireet Eelabis true, Olas?’ ake eakea ince eet. Lada Ethe1, | fully: ‘Hler Ladyshtp"—no pen can de- an—or the woman herseif—puc| end avold every sort of conversation that even equine | Sebreet ax well as Its noblest work. A Broadway Conductor's Game. | tow voice . i Wa Lady Bthel: | crite the hate and inalice of the tones sald the duchess not without | politics. ; [tow vote ily "She ald nol Peeve oo e examination of 390 children between the ages of | To the Paitor of The Bvening World “I do not know,” he responded. “I as) marriéd) to yous ia” wineh we mare Lith Ase re THE ¥ i | q pposed to have been killed e fire and fourteen in Boston kindergartens elicited Look out for the aut Lennalisiae only know that this {s my wife, my|She agreed with mo that It was best to a tee i Fo MNIGKG atin Bere ———— INVALIDS SHOULD EXERCISE) i \ ; i Who shoves smooth nickels, dimes and | gear, dear wife, “stored to me from tie you." al the “low place * = = pa of all kinds of lies. It was noticed that thelr} quarters on passengers. He won't take 4 Bessie “peas ear ctathatan ean formed.’ : niet THE HEART'S DESIRE. Many of the allments for which physiolons prescribe Dim ine ahaa large) a their likes and dis- Lee By fare, but he pues * hes out] Besste laid her face against his breast] “My poor Beswle!’ he exclaimed, Oh, ie uiectienad tron Lady Bthet's diree-} | Goa made her body out of foam and mudi and pepe ends: xariety ot other diag 4 digeation™ ) an enemy they were disposed to lie and to al #!! rant CKEL OUT, [in silence. my darling! My poor darling!" tlon to the duchess, flowe wou e entirely a y exercise as much as posalbi ito tell the truth, a child willing to tell its mother Wedding Rin A music-hall singer! groaned th Q he nese Saie had te cn listening | "Tt ts true, “Only it was ‘And for her hair the dawn and] Jin the open air, says the Philadelphia Ledger, ate : a eae Om countess. aT “di watching the: threes: facentnoe tbat an r woman, l=I midnight blent; Hven a frail person, one who has fairly reached the age of Ag tere. NV tecieoneea Ra iat de turned his head, his white, wild ame and put hor| did not know; when-when | {Phen called two planets from thel:| | decreptitude, should be encouraged to use the wheel chain the childish aptitude for building air castles| ,. Ee carci et tO Hk Intended] or) tushea and on Hesste's arm. learned it, I~ It better that 1 heavenly towers, Ive massage and be taken out of the bed every day fos Hug in a realm of imagination has much to dolor to Mirinity onetieg ee ending: NOE| eyes, mother; but if she knew" Heasle did not shrink, but looked at 4 be as one de: i. And In her face, divinely eloquent, | | @ while. Me way : “stop! sald the duchess he e 10r ne nlliner re were tears onthe duchess's| | Gave them a firmament. The day should be varied as much as possible, and ¢he ofienese to prevaricate. As for the example HD. @. 8 her steadily for a moment: then her aad oe ie dint AR dell Toeeroehen “A Sale, 'Phore ‘tavaolute! wwerline the {®2Y more at present joyes fell. before the duchess'’s sharp | face as she put her arm around Bessie ly exe! 80 possible for 0 rest get them hear the testimony of Prof. W. H. aon a ae zit rule aSvaTI aN ‘he | netter go to your room," She iurned to| ones and drew the girl's head on her bosom.| | God made her heart of rosy ice and] | naturally during the long perlods of rest which the diseams h “We are fully convinced that we can| it te tn more cuncomay sola eal ied the crowd at the door with her rarely} ‘It Isctime you spoke, my dear,” sala] “My poor child! she sald, brokent: ‘fire, whether acute or chronic, necessitates, £ and entirely truthful.” tha Inltiale’ot the tride and bridegeseas| used “ducal” manner; /'You may the a “, grimly. “Hush, Ciyde;| “It 18 a terrible story! Clyde! Clya Of snow and flame, that freezes| | There are wertain diseases which are called fatigue dle " and the date of the wedding.” Jand the crowd drew back, but on hist, ail of you! I want to hear {t trom} You have both of you patd very dearly while it burns eases-—tremor, writer's cramp and local spasm, These ar€ ois peivin , <P EROS AEE OSL UIRL See: the hall, “You had better go, her own Mps, I will know the truth of your folly and Its concealment!" ‘And of @ starbeam and a moth’s de | | all caused by the excessive use of special munclos, and/ng ON aban eh Reamer Days of the Week, she said. | thin, Af it. be poasibin te Know .{ ‘Phe fault was ining, all mine! he aire one so affiicted should fail to etop for a certain: time eas ; periences,” used the word | yo the waitor of The Evening World: Lady Ethel drew hersett up. Why ald you leave your husbend, Lord! said in a Jow voice. He shaped her soul, toward which| | day as long a time ae can be spared times and “drought a took of] What day ,, resent.” It is only on} 1875; rin the presence | fal ofthe week did Aug. %, 28, 1879, and March 3, ¥; Romer, wabmnds bali ris want fo ask her bi Ay ce "L have to put a question to Clyde 1ST, | iret, whe said. * Leyton’ > himt—| Beesle’s eyes Med with tears, ores keot them back or ft was mine!" said Bexste, the and let the part ty the repose which) tt demands, ‘This suggestion ty ap meant for nographers. and operato : agp dh