The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1909, Page 15

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, January [5, [09 Se reece rrr eee ener eee oo s CI OA || i; The Jollys’ Bull Pup # © w By tlCoultas |) Mrs. Jarr Is Moved | a Married Man. : She Learns All About Mrs. Kittingly; phn 8.9 : Asks Mr. Jarr’s Sympathy For Her. By Clarence L, Cullen. Toes 9000006 DOVTOOMIOTTEMIEOCACOROS ROCoOOOUOG . TRAT EARLY TRAIN| E By Roy L. McCardell, steamboats, but they were tmpoverisnea i . ? J iats | by the war,” AVE you wonder the of the third [f AND HAVE NOTIME) X | : 4 RS KIT. cae ae has been over for some : H Nasee en wart wil) blunder PUM. quertael és TO PLAY, GIVE 4 M aes time, Um informed,” wald Mr, Jarr i “2 Women whocontrib-\to be stung by the genealogical bug again to-day," anid] A titan arg a heartless wreteh,"’ i \ 3 ute to the “What lonly do it in order to prove, if they can, Mrs, Jarr. sald Mra. Jarr, "She says herself when | — Women Most Like {What patricians they are compared te ‘ny mumptea [282 tie to be gay she Is misunder- d CLARENCELCULEN sen? symposia | thelr pleheian hushends tie OLY stood Be | are frank enough| Next to pret typewritists and “Poor thingl| soy it, ppoan Enoarey fo long as she ; to acknowledge they also like the man/Manteure girls a married woman thinks You know I think Be Mi a5, way with me," sald Me, | with $9335 that handsome trained wurses need she's been greatly |J4™ virtuous, You are perfectly right, Agatha. Wo- | Watching misjudg and} ,, Tlave no fear” said Mra, Jarr, cut: : men are more self-controlled than inen, | -S Woman whose husband plays poker the way people| {KY “sho prefers tall, dark men, sha | tind to consider him as on the road toid me so, For example, the woman who pencils |!% tullk about her {a ‘Aw, [don't care. er eyelashes always thinks twice be- | '@ "in—unless he develops the winning | cruel. It's a shama ; she's tore publicly bursting into frars. | habit and comes across every time with | the way some peo- | sald My. Jay and re- ‘The novelist who said recently that he j “Her bit.” plo talk about a{ ied to the recital of Mr, Nelson's would be able to do some decent work if} ‘The experienced husband would vastly | ‘woman who has had a deep sorrow in | 2oUshty deeds ft were not for the fact that he had to|Drefer, during a domestt: fracas, to! lhentiitementyataninianniantincreicense ow, you just listen; she was asking oo “welte down’ to hla women readers, had | have his wife indulge In rancorous re- | our advice; she has one to whom she 4 people who are always #o quick to plek | flaws In other people's better look to their own “Chhuh," sald Mr, Jarr Delph can confide," said Mrs. “I thought you sald you * remark Detter watch out if he expects to stick | marks than to begin to hum alrily. | around as a “best seller’ writer. Often there's @ world of mischievous | Now is the time when a woman par medttation going on behind those bat-| characters had | ere golng d Mr. Jarr, | to cut her out?" ally, | ticularly hatew to see her husband pay | fing hums. | las he continued centred in ble news, |< aid not know the facts then,” sald u $8 for a box of cigars, when there are| Would you I!ke to get on a winning ees Mrs, Jarr, “like the rest of the world, fo many “white sales” going on milllon to one shot? Then tell your ‘Lam aure you are very polite when| £ Jmisiudwed her, But think of her The Ddlithe young married man| Nfe When you get home this evening I'm talking to you to keep sour noso| Position, all alone tn the world, with |that a "School for Wives’ has been Ae ‘j jothing but her a 01 0 who insists today upon his wife} started tn Chicago—which 1s a fact- musk in that old newspaper reading avicer hetfenalvalisioriwetetnten taking a couple of cocktails with|and it's a miltion or @ billion to one nes, WG Ao et Beene al unworldly nature. That's because she twon't have to do any of that partio- igohool for Fabands! Ta like ¢ when I am talking to you about Mra. 7 “L hate to seandal,” sald Mr. Jare, ular kind of insisting after a while. know?” [ae cae AeieBlondenupatalra ey eee SEER Ia crt The clip who thinks it's a bangeup| When a man waits till he's forty Henraat at ncnee aa See eT YON Aime thettaniuabiltc oi mall arate scheme to take lis young wife out for or forty-five to get married his wife ® rattling soot ne has a coats |iuat can't help wondering every min- tl {t over the next morning Ww! a4 = i scar her bloodshot eyes, her gen- lute how in the tolde world he ever eral dishevelment and her trembly | managed fo live all those years with. bromo-seltzer activities. (out her, | Once we knew a grass widow Who! when you hear @ woman «ay that | openly boasted of her ability to put|nor husband is “Just the most helpless clever men over the jumps. Now she's) creature you ever saw,” you are justi- married to a plano-thumper in a moving | yeq in supposing that she never by any pleture show who couldn't, and|chance pute the buttons and atuds In wouldn't, jump over a trailing arbutus. jhls suirts. But he blackens her eyes every week —e—— I or so just for exercise. It's a tosaup which is the cheaper “Well, {f she's a. nde she's natural} age “that's the point she wanted blonde. She only touches up her hair aj to consult me about. Did you know Uttle, and {t's no ain for a woman to] she wasn't really divorced this last keep herself attractive, although Mrs] tme? It's only @ mutual separation Kittingly says she hates men, just de-] owing to a cruel misunderstanding.” splses them, and I don't blame her, and} ‘What's that got to do with it, who's \eho Isn't gay, elther, She was crying the tall, dark stranger? asked Mr. here fit to break her heart when she] Jerr. was telling me her troubles, But you) ‘Sssh!" sald Mrs, Jarr, getting up aro not dnterested because {t shows what | and closing the door, ‘Ihat's the very tyrants and brutes men can be, the way | thing. She's so afraid of being talked that poor llttle thing was treated by|@bout. It's her husband” her first and gecond husbanda|” | “The first or second? inquired Mr, “Now, look here!" said Mr, Jarr, rous- | Jarr. Mere Detail. | “PANS THIS Jing up, “don't discuss the little blond | ‘Dear me,” sald Mrs, Jarr, “T wae #0 | and orneryer, the woman who reads | 18 aeroplane is wider ¢ YouR SHOE lady with me. Half the time you tell | interested I forgot to ask her!'* vatoud the letters another man has H Than the Wright: . and ts me she's no good and half the time you | ————..—_——— written her to the man she's with} long; jist me she's td Ee Een ab lmrpeacserncreete meses arts} o ; § uch, | with you on elther o ; for the man who permits her to do|} Te does, not mele one belt 84 much eee eee ee eae ealneia GPltSaaa oe Experience. that kind of reading. iitenemoneiten | the other for being dnfatuated with her, ald a0 on the sign, When a woman begins fervently to And {t Is twice as high; I don't want to know her, I've trouble I But still you felt a doubt vow to everybody she knows how] The only drawback to ft {s enough of my own.’ About {t, and, {n fine, much she loves her husband the wise | ‘That he can't make {t fy. “Well, she's @ good-hearted ttle You thought you'd find {t out. old tabbies of her acquaintance begin —Houston Post. thing, always has something for the!) It didn’t help you much, to exchange significant looks and to (jee ctdldren and gives me theatre thoketa, But still your heart was set es Saas as “ —s — which {9 more than you'd do, and it To put {t to the touch— would have broken your heat if you Of course, the paint was wet. ‘i had heard her tell the story of her life," remarked Mrs, Jarz. You'N find auch signs, my friend, “T'm glad I didn’t bear her, then,” Along this Ufe's uighway. said Mir, Jerr, “My heart sults me as The men who know intend it ta; I get @ hob-nail ver once in a To warn by that display, HE almple little while, but my heart*—— But we, of course, are bound aly sitp that is fin- “Abt” sald Mra, Jarry paying ao heed Experience to get, ished with frills but thinking of Mrs. Kitingty’a sad] } Although we've always found at the neck and the =" story, “She was but such a mere slip The paint we touched was wet. » oR Eee idee Cae ora os ical eer ase My bi intro! the {teh one, and {8 so com- dresses to her ahoe hi oy, 901 6 Ite! fortable that the baby | f h P ‘ d No. 25.—Charlotte Walker. | husband tempted her to elape with! } To prove—be not begulled. Would) ho rendered | ayers of the fF eriod. a 7 Hy joe Bleces nea Who tandies palntor pitch | happy by wearing it| @ Peewee Ob eee ee SM Mit they all say!" otorted Is sure to be defiled. much of the time. : : Mr, Jarz, A@ warnings never scoft ¥ Here is a pretty one HARLOTTE WALKER, whose popularity with our theatregoing public 8, The season of 1905-06 Miss Walker was New York's most ative actress, begin~| pug ¢ know ahe was epeaking the ‘And then you'll not regret that 4s simpllcity itself, C ever on the increase, was born In Galveston, Tex., De 188, belng a ning in August at the New Amsterdam Theatre in the dual roles of Thora and| truth pecnuse her eyes filled with| $ You kept your fingers off; Anduewhishimeaniana direct descendant of the Pickney family, long diatingulshed in § rn Elin tn "The Prodigal Soni" n October sho created the role of Madge Bender 1" | teara," sald Mra, Jerr, “She comes Belleve the paint 1s wet. made from lawn,| social and political affairs, She received har 1 “The Embassy Ball," on tour; In November she was the grown-up Caudle 4N| trom @ grand old Southern family; they —Chicago News, ballste, wala) aimilar| r native town, and began her stage career in | "The Prince Chap," at Weber's Theatre; in December ahe was Dora Leland in| owned alaves end hed plantations and matertals or from g small parts in Richard Mansfield's company. She then| “As Ye Sow," at the Garden; In February ehe wan Porsts Van Duyn tn “The flannel or flannelette went abroad and madg her London debut at the Comedy Triangle,” at the Manhattan; In April ahe played Hattle Drake tn “The Optimist,” | lenieintat patted can ‘Theatre, July 2, 18, with Charles Hawtrey, as Hattle Van at Da na the month following sie was ween at Wallach's aa Jllzabeth Holt | % x greater Tassel] Smythe in "The Mummy.” Following this Miss in “The Embarrassment of Riches." ‘The next season Milos Walker played but) | My Cycle of Readings. “ mlPaaaat Walker left the stage and for four years the footlights! one part, Constance Pinckney in “On Parole.” ‘The sumiuer of 1907 she was! ty long enough to keep knew her not. She resumed professional activitles the sea- again In Washington, D. C., at both the Columbia and Belasco Theatres, playing | By Count Tolstoy. inanittiatearartearn son of 140-01, dividing that season between Mario Dreesler's | Dora in “Diplomac * Kitty Floyd in “Bruvver lated by El Be andvantizianditlaiads company, as Mabel Morningside iu ‘Miss Print," and es Jim's Baby,” the title role in nin “Aristocracy,”” Jane ~~~—~Translated by Herman Bern: CaNIRH Gen em chs Jane Caldwell in "Sag Harbor.” Nagle in “The Manoeuvres of Jc ompson In "The Stubbornness of (Coprriented by We, Pree, pee, nee Some Mectionanien tian) Miss Walker began the following season as Anton{a tn Geraldine,” Puchsla Leach tn Mo jomas in Tha Amazons,” Nora tn | (Copgriatted by Hernan . masvadantitvtatima “pon Caesar's Return,” in the support of James K, Hack-! “A Doll's House,” Mrs, Murgatroyd In "A Bunch of Violets," the name part in| The italicized paragraphs are Count terlal required 2 PT ett, appearing a fow months later with Kyrlo Bellew as "Zaza," Lady Windomero in "Lady Windemere’s Fan," Kate Curtis tn “Cousin | { inal comments on thé subject, yarde 2 or 2, 21.4) GNARCTTC WALKER, Mme, de Brubl in “A Gentleman of France.” Sha rejotmed Kate,” and Kitty In "The Marriage of Kitty.” 3 4 yards 3 or 2 yards 4 Mr, Loe eer he spring of 192, bag vet Miss Walker spent the season of 190-08 as Agatha Warren in “The Werrens of s Irit 1 P } 0 4 hes wide, with 11-4| ‘he capacity of leading woman, r the following ttres years she was his virginia,” and the past summer she returned to Washington for a third stock y ‘ Infant's SIlp—Pattern No. 6217, WardsVorifUtaine) |opvonte player, beng Virginia Carvel in ‘The Crisis,” Katherine Searles In geason, adding four more roles to her repertoire, Angela Muir in “A Country piritua eace, { Pattern No. 6217 is cut In one size only “John Ermine, of the Yellowstone,” Queen Cecelia in “The Crown Prince," Jane \ouse,” the ttle part in “Candida,” Raina Petkoft in "Arma and the Man,” and AITH ods to spinttual peaos, ~ |Lane in "The Fortunes of the King,” and Beatrice in “The House of Silence.” | suzanne Trevor in “The Freedom of Suzanne.” The past August she eppeared in mew Cell or send by mall to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN.} | 0" & fow weeks early in the fall of 104 Mise Walker was Ada Van Allen in| Chicago for a brief time as the lone heroine, Hilda, In “The Wolf," and this NH thing {6 essential: to give one's sett to God, J. te TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 18 East Twenty-third street, Now f Jack # Tittle Surprise.” at MI sad a eet a als Mr Hackett's direction. gegson she ts again one of "The Warrens of Virginie,” at present tenanta of the O Seo that you yourself are in order, and leave tt Obtaia } York, Gerd 10 cents in coln or etasaps for each pattern ordared. eeaeeiac? ol sins abe appeared w 4) the pout ne res ion i EE ne IoD: Academy of Must. Miss Walker hae paid tribute at Hymen's alter upon two to God to disentangle the threads of the world 15. "These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address pleinly, and ale | » playing Mrs. Dane in “Mrs, Dane all seen LTO Ute accasto| rst, while a girl in her teens, becoming the wifs of Dr. John B, May- 4 | Wind," Suzanna in ‘The Masked Ball,” Mrs, McManus In “Betsy,” Julia | 7 yal phys! Omi natascure herd . and {ts fates, be 1t destruction or {mmortality. That Patterns, § ways apecity size wanted es ‘i ie . vie den, a Galveston phystctan, from whom she recured a diyorce last summer, and | | Whitewashing Julia,” Miriam In “The Butterflies,” and Betty Fondacre tn “The | on Dec, 1 she married Eugene Walter, the well-known playwright | which dhould be will be, That which will be—will be iS DCMI ARATE RETA SE Mysserloua MroBusle, y for the best. In order to Journey the road of life perhaps nothing ie-ness=. sary for man except faith in goodness.—Amiel. vere 9904000089000! 10:89:05.0 9.9.99009.OHO08O92 FIO SOIHEDPSHDBIDPHHDDTHALOODGIAD: 643.946-60-00G19090000 990099 999DGODO0DO49-04.00GOOOG.0 ee) . e . AGION has 1 6 education of a good man, It yaa Love and Gold Hunting * By Rex Beach by ae i; tint GG EE URE, GA oka as a Tt Tr 1 e H @ : = , 69 pean man to Tenticat pi ot cadeeianllneetaasine ucts In the Frozen Klondike @ Author of “The Spoilers." @ > SOOOCE CLASSI SL OGIGHO4E04O9960 xo POEL HEI TIHHDVSI-> $ 1 OEOOOU4 “ O04 See dOd8OO4K FRIEND, why should you trowbls yourself over the mystertes- cpap’ (Coovelght, 1008, by Harper & Broa yinsensible to fatigue and causing them |iay off his pack, at which he pretended the shoulder of an untimbered ridke,made as if to prepare thelr meal, duty Io took a seat beside her on a pile of tstoncef Why should you torment your heart and soul with ditfowl® BYNOPSI8 OF PRECHDING cHaprens, (2,"UTY the more breathlessly that | to obey mutinoysly, though thrilling |that ran down Into the valley. And she would have none of tt boughs where the smoke was least reflecNonef IAve happily, pase your the joyfully; at the end yom wet Gale Boat trader enbeatt on the Hd mieht eopner teat one Ay Peale | mith keenest delight at his own there, ie up {a i e edge of ae ; pee should never 0 ne de oubiascmns he had chosen a spot that | will not be asked thy te the world euch aa tt (2, jon, has ‘an Indian wife, Aliuna, and one s y | Submission, spruce, they selected a mossy sheif clared. ‘That work belong to Ilttles,"’ | was sheltered by @ lchen-covered ; Hautlyl dadatase, Neclt sweet silences where the waters laughed = "What aro you going to do?" he tn- and pitched thetr camp. then forced him to vacate her domain ledgs, and this tow wall behind, with Look ab rhe Oe cr se) ie aes oe peat nd ee Birrell local miliary ‘commander, taut in vith them and the traes whispered thelr quired, | They had become so Intimate now as|and turn himself to the mantier duties the wicklup Joining {t, formed an tn- dawn, There will come a eneh vos Gad will not find that MB on” pores, “Gale's young “Frenes Secret, bowing and nodding in Joyous! “Mind your own business, sir," she!to fall into a whimsical mode of of chopping wood and boughs. closure that lent them a certain atr of | moment of We which filled us with surprise in this delusive world, The Driner, wecresly logee Neca, Burreit Jeatis surprise at this invasion: or, again, the | conimanded, sternly. peech, and Necia reverted to a child- Wwever, she showed him how Drivacy. They ate ravenously and| morning haa thrown off the cover of darkness—what ts there to grieve for? Jor de aA ty Dhaba oal juseate, Tomibed with them, men From her belt she drew a little hunt-{!sh habit In her talk that brought to place two green toot-logs upon which | rank seep cupfuls of the unflavored | pige; tet us avail ourselves of the morning, for many mornings will yet company: ithe brat pad. wan’ | !NK how and then to rush out and greet ing knife, with which she cut and}Many @ smile to the youth's face. It pot and the frying pan would |'e& By the time they were finished coma when there will be no breath (n us any longe haned aT eNO Creek Lees) a | rospector. them at the bends in boisterous pleasure. | trimmed a slender birch the thickness had been her fancy as a little girl to he upsetting, and how long she the night had fallen and the alr was| Fine ais and oleon, wh ne They held to the bed of the atream, | o¢ his thumb, whereupon he pretended |apeak in adjectives, Ignoring many of |wished the sticks of wood, Just cool enough to mnke the, ftre| P Ree ae tale Neca euenN ae for its volume was low and enabled) great fright, and said her nouns, and its quaintness had so | Then she banished him, as it were, and |S8feeable. Burrell heaped on more| PT {s sald that the last day will bo a general day of judgment, and that her by @ shore out, by | them to ford it from bar to bar, Necla| 4. 1 ow " »» amused her father that on rare occa: he bull tokiup of C6 to) jer | WO0d and stretched out beside her, God, the merciful, will be angry. But kindness can breed nothing but posod of the Gold siriko In time to stake out | had heen raleed in the open, with the) Please’ Flease: What have I done? ; aaa ition aetcinentreut bel Varner ln Bla aye hesisbasnis bok wonderfull ‘i 4 if f Bark Ghats. Meantime Gale, Lee, Volaon, | Ot pices (37 hee saversina vit her, vA Breat deal! You are a most bold sions, when the humor was on him, he|the shelter of which he piled thick, | sclatinerevunat pile sae dl Kindness. Fear not: the end will be full of Joy. The different religious her route, | muscles were like those of a boy, henco /@N4 stubborn creature.” ae ene ae Be nena ee aeaet Bye ae oe Busy banat sleop. fean't dat to and itm © |have divided mankind into seventy-two natlous—of all thelr dogmas I have |the two swung merrily onward as if in| |All pack animals are stubborn.” he! “iy sink we are very amart to come | he vised. trove! in the colors that | “Ut ¥@u must be woary, Iitele maia,'| chosen one: divine love-—Perstan Khayyam. CHAPTER VI. playful contest, whlle the youth had declared. "IC'e the only privilege they A fe the gad Ee COREE MI and to | 29,sa8t gently) Tam,” - |never occasion to wait for her or to) "8k ary Pasar You travel like a deer,” he declared, drink {n the splendid fit all, |. Walt, let me see." She stretched her} HO {sa kind man? Only a religious man !s kind it what {s kind: The Burrell Code. [moderate his se a foot lng suates are auch ce pe edie admiringly. “Why, you have tired me| Below lay tha bed « Bear peed Cats mere’ alightly to t ne W ness? First and above all {s the harmony between the will and the i 7 was more sure than hls, rt) 8 \ r rs imnamasinglhisieackeleratrerchs Grae a lentiand taambre 9 creap. | muscles. “Yes, very ne ite ns > IN ise the mes ay my rae! Sian pene ventured ou Holealatlag) mee only presumption {s in loving | (a7), reas are AN baa Tea ee ie \ donee ey ne kind of tired that makes you conscience (reason).—Chinese ELT 7. nat lay across swift, | YOU ‘ - Mae wenat i ¢ the | Want to go to bed, I wa 9 talk, talk, with Necla through the untrodden erase deptbe ' Misa That was not presumption,” she | Dis shoulders. jes je westward brim of the) | ai. ah at about ¢ ron Nance F I say sincerely: May Your will de done om earth as in Hea that 48, Valley, and yet its incidents were never | smiled It was pre-emption, You Which way does our course lie now, | Yukon bas! the peaks were blue and Wat aie ere é Mileetheniiane clegr-cut nor distinct when he looked! The wilderness had no mystery fOr) igen punished : Pathfinder?" fvory and gold in the pu eocerae cre pier minal rlel cous in this temporary life even as in eternal life—then I nee Bi) con back upon them, put blended into one her, and no terrore, so she was ever Mt) ir ga) sin away,’ he threatened Right up the side of this big, while the open slopes be re nalaone sect ‘ ne firmations, no prooya of Immortality. I give myself to the will of the Prapeu es neocensiony ba lees wandered | Meise ue acy cncal iW ie ner ever Ureahalt galley (rant om ahrouguilthatee nce te crimes 1 cto ypoure,|e) Svuy) Were 8 ORrper oe saten Panae ty Lata cs Infinite Being, blessing this willy I knot that it ts love—whatymore do I through some calenture where every schooled in the tints of the forest, and) | ye fl sin i i bt we come to a gully running @ short-lived flowers 6 wcemeay (Onnare as Pere) Image was delightfully distorted and more active than those of a bird, saw | © oe eein to eat grass. TAM ingicated an imaginary lrection—|warda asleep, and vas the |AAustible charm for A . each act deliciously unreal, yet all the every moving thing, trom the flash ot | Very wild “which we Ro down till it Joins another | hush of the lonely lio had not oren allowed hinseit to ¢ © © Christ, dying, said: “Father, into Thy hands I commend my bweeter from its fleeting unreality, They |a camp-robber's wing through some| A® ahe talked sho drew from her stream ao, ani there we'll find| A gust blew think, ae yet, aud there were rensons spirit.” He iho can say these words, comprehending their full significance, * / talked and laughed and sang with a) hidden glade to the inquisitive nodding | pocket a spool of line, and took a fy- old ‘No Creek's’ cabin, #0! Won't they ko toward al cae vn needs nothing else, Faith, true faith, solves everything. rush of spirits as untamed as the|of a fool hen where it perched Iigh up | hook from her hat; then, in a trice, be surprised to see I think we're ito wateh Necin i . Ma! In order to have thie faith dt ts neoassary to educate it within us, And Waters In the courte they followed. | against the bole of a spruce. They aur-/she had rigged a fishing-rod, and, yery cunning to beat them don't | ike some grace = 7 : eee Raraninniialr) , They wandered, hand-in-hand, into A prised a marten fishing In a drift-wood | creeping out upon a ledge, aha whipped | you?" She iauxied a giad little bubs | rites, wile the 4 ‘ ae id 1 order to educate it it (a necessary 10 perform the acts of faith, — 1 Jand of Mlustons, where there was noth- | dam, but ehe would not let the soldier the pool below of & half-dozen rain- | piing laugh, and he cried odor of burning # ae eat The essence of the acts of falth is not in great deeds, but in deeds, per ing tangible but Joy. The touch of | shoot, and made him pass it by, where bow trout, which she thruat Inte Nao coh, girl! How wonderful you are! |cenge tn his nostrils « haps imperceptible, sometimes instgnifcant, but performed erclusively fort } thelr lips had waked that delight which |{t sat amazed till {t realized that these aay while they were still wriggling. ‘Ita getting very dark flerce,” | Ho filed hie chest deep! 4 lea , f Mb as p God ‘ comes but once in a lifetime, and then | were lovers and resumed ite flaking, Then she as quickly put up her gear C and all ° sework !on hie axe, for he Ah w " " 1 ’ ‘ ry for @ te wat few; It was like the meon-mad- | Gradually the stream diminished, and and they resumed thelr Journey, cllmb- be done ling ae teu ' . « \ t "i A ma 1 to die alone, sald Pascal; (t (9 also necessary for cach one neap of the tropica or the dementia of | its bowldered bed became more difficult |Ing more steeply, now, until, when the; So he bull, a fre, then felehed @ | expectancy Balers BOR to live alone before God and not before other people. the forest folv in spring. A gentle|to traverse, until, dseunting the aire of |sun was low, they uit the stream-hed | bucket of water from a rill t&St trickled] “Your supper t* getting mal None 6 ever u wens ' Premsy possessed them, rendering them @ leader, the gitl commanded him te'and made throug: the forest toward !down among the recke @aNp by. Hoe ‘eeiled to bim (de | DO not think that you cam find eptetiuc! peace without folth, 4 5 4 1 i has a en

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