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Cerca men nen tenet MRE SA TEA ONT IARNPL REO NEI A) RRM ts The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, January 26, 1911. x of Peers a Mrs. Solomon a Dafly Except Sunday wy ihe Press een ing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 T h e N e W S t y l e e % i Sayings i LNGUS, SHAW, Pros andthe Ose vit PULITZER, Juntor, Bee'y. | B y Maurice Ketten. ¢ the Post-Office at New York aa Sccond-Cinss Matter | PI Being the Confessions of the Seven tes to. The Evening | For Fneiand and the Continent and - — Hi dredth Wife for the United States All Countries tn the International | Do Yo ANT i} tl SEE THEBIG VERY FINE ane : and Canada. Postal Union. | { }U WAN You BET! Looting peieseses $8.80] One Year. : To SEE A VERY _) THERE ARE FELLOW, « 80|One Month ( Nice Loonie, 7 | So Few BS ENE Wanpsone?) = \Y FIANCE VOLUME 51.......4 eeeveenee veseees | Nieto wn? f {Lor Tem a, F _——— 'Y Daughter, hear the instructions of a Flirt, and ——$——$—— ns | eee ras perc a eres M attend to know understanding, for of men I id « TIGHT FITTING —- have been acquainted with upward of ninety WHY MR, ROOSEVELT DIDN T SIGN. TROUSERS ves tm Ea - and nine, and in the days of my youth my, fame was ROM out of the babble of the National Progressive eo og Just GONG | & mighty in the land, Republican League comes the clear statement that | Ree ne NEW py Sorat € | se Aer bab 16 Gites Hed vai ss Hee a ri ped - ae My bed + the only reason Mr. Roosevelt was not among the | TYLE wae ul -— \ Soave aeuenn bal ear oe er like unto a good reputation, w! 8 signers of the “Declaration of Principles” was a | — i For clinging vines are posse, and a gticking plaster is an abomination; fear that his signature would have been a handicap | Fae | but a difficult proposition interesteth ANY man. and perhaps a hoodoo. “Had his name appeared in | i Behold, if thou wouldst win in the game of Love, seck not to BEAT « list,” said one of the insiders, “people would have taken the move- | H+ ! ' man at any other game, whether it be at politics or at golf or at repartee. mt for a third term propaganda.” | H —— For @ man respecteth the man that worsieth him in a fistic encounter, This i il h i vit 4 ry bl ] but he despiseth the woman that worsteth him in an argument, his is an illustration of the swiftness with which a politician a easy cor Baan When a man saith unto thee, “1 love thee for thyself ALONE, and not swing his policy around the whole horizon, from the austral to af for thy clothes nor thine adornments,” kiss him and rumple up his hair, dui boreal pole. Last summer, a short six months ago, these same Ks OAL me al go thy ways untroubled, esives were eager, insistent, almost clamorous to have Mr. | HERES Hid THAT'S A REA = For a daub of powder on the nose is worth tivo on the puff, and a made- . | L HIS SHOULDERS ARE AS WIDE A elt assume the leadership agsl shout the war ery. Now they PHOTO. MAN AND. SHOULDER ARE AS WIPE) ai te eat Leper Lainatbetinginttal nis Liddledeetie ss iin not wish his name even as a tail-ender, CAN You (WOULD LItTE TO. AS THAT Let not a man find thee “at home” on three Wednesdays in succession, bn ith 4 ‘ 4 ‘ || Beart MEET HIM — lest he was SURE of thee, and say in his heart, “Lo, she EXPECTETH me! f So it is that some people read the meaning of the vote last) |qHaT FoR —_ . IT have got her going!” For in the love game an ounce of uncertainty is ‘worth a poung of hos- pitality. Expensive thy frilis as thy purse will afford. For though a man knoweth not last year's leftover from this yecr's fad, nor 10-cent cotton ftom $10 crepon, yet he knoweth a GOOD LOOKER when he seeth her. I charge thee fling away ambition! For by that sin fell the Spinstere, Lo, a Uttle college is a dangerous thing, and much learning is a handicap, For what profiteth it a damsel, though she speak four languages ond THINE in two, yet cannot babble baby talk in ONE of them? Verily, verily, in Love, as in all things, the supply shall meet the de mand! Behold she that expecteth adoration shall receive it; she that ew» pecteth decoration shall be decorated; but she that eapecteth nothing shall get NOTHING! Then heed my instructions, my Daughter; for I have dwelt long tn the Land of Flirtation. Yea, I have known MUCH men! And unto me they are |more simple than a dropstitch! SELAH! HI. But the trus tari have learned nothing. hey still etand pat for} c | ——__—__-++. HOUSE MONEY AND TIPS. USTOM HOUSE investigations have brought to light the fact that for many years it has been a practice of large firms to give money to cus- | toms clerks and weighers in payment of prompt attention to their business and for expediting the discharge of cargoes. The practice is said to have ome so common that it was looked upon as legitimate, despite the statutory prohibition. The donations were known as “house money.” Virtually they were tips. Just as a rich man gives the waiter of a enfe a so-called ” AND HE DRESSES THAT'S NICE . ©, You THEY ARE ALL : opratuity in payment for more attention and prompter service than | {To BEAT THE “ So Few oF THESE sCeerueagt Deceiver! Lite THAT . other patrons get, so the rich firms sought to gain a similar advantage | ALANS: in piped etic, SEE MY NEW, D TA -TA 4 fs h e J arr F ami l y ,at the eustom house. Te LATEST ee SuIT By S In one form or another the practice is universal. Men of wealth STYLE j} eee | Me we Mrs, Farr and her Mother Gibe maturally seck to buy special favors in the competitions of life. Nor ea thas any effective guard against it in private business ever been de- | {¥ised. In public affairs, however, it is called bribe-taking, and that | ‘ills it. 4% ~~ First Aid to the Uninjured 1911, by The Press Pub) Copyriah ing Co, (The New York World), “What's the. matier, ladles? he By Roy L. McCardell. psxoa. “The man—over there! Hi cried Mrs, Jarr’s mother. “He paid his fare when he got on,” said the conductor. “I don't know what ectly opposite |! Sot to do with it, Bee, hela got a | in his mitt!" ote Sarr and her-| wife isn't dead. But let us go. "He The man sat | 100%# dreadful!” moaned Mrs. Jarr. with one elde of! “If you don't shake him and then stop his face toward | ‘M18 car and notify a policeman I'll ree them and the| Port you!” sald Mrs, Jarr's mother. Other against the| “Suppose the guy's only sleeping?” talddie window of |@8ked the bewildered conductor, ‘Sup: dia wetaet cars He ’ ping and I shakes him was Gout, ae gail es him and he hands me a -¢2—_____—_— | BEAUTY AND MORALITY. ENNSYLVANIA has settled the controversy over the nude statues of the Capitol at Harrisburg by draping them with plaster of paris. There will be, of course, many voices of protest and not a few of ridicule, Nevertheless, ‘the action of the au- thorities will be approved almost overwhelmingly | 4 by the moral sentiment of the people at large. Objection to the nude in art is not due to a survival of Puri- dead 66] OOK at that man: cried Mrs. Jarr’s mother, pointing to a passenger on the street car| who sat almost dl- | by danism among us, as is so often and so scoftingly said by the artistic hg? with erisp| young man," said Mrs, Jarr’é | Silevotees of beauty unadorned. It is due to a feeling that is part mustache. His jaw hung open and the | moter on ree ate wert bbl vara Mre. 1d |bands, I know what I'm talidr } *and parcel of the Saxon temperament. It was there before there was one eye turned toward Mrs. Jarr afl lhat man is gone from this velé of i eo : eA ah pain, however fleeting, shot through my | could say no more, and, for some deadly to each other. And deadly I dare | her mother regarded them with @ dull, deeka’tioi \ any Puritanism. It has been there steadfastly since Puritanism per- heart, scruple of conscience, he would #ay no|say we were, each to the other's peace glazed stare. (ie) upposed traveller to that dis , by ¥ i 7 it ae They ‘ ‘And you have made me love you!| more. I suppose he feared speech would | of mind. At least I can vouch for my] «+ ,ething wrong with him. supposed travel h - i Mished, We call it modesty. Other races call it prudery. They may ra weries of 0-1 orfed, tnd in lovermakine, and he was already | troubled peace throughout those dreary ae, at cael pe tsbled Mrs, Jerr, |tant bourne brought an end to all argue { “be right; we may be wrong. But none the less the feeling is an meets Dry bay. too much the priest in spirit to permit | days, ho was a New Yorker with no relish | ment by closing his mouth with a guly i 4 : : ¢ i fa, akos an inet pression, Bul: Chapter V. h mseif any more of that. | I was bored, too. Not an available | ¥2° 4 ed | and sitting bolt upright. i essential part of our American morality, and it is just as well to have | Myre Tpit iP dhe! ants Wer love for bith Pp ( T would gladly have ieft St. John’s the |man in sight; not a petticoat but the| for mixing Into affairs that concern “pidn't I tell you that guy was ent, ° A sel . ae FAME) i sleidieti |. asl adh 7 J] HAD thought that cry of mine| act Gay, but Aunt Alison, whose con- |Sad-colored robes of the slstera or the | her not. leant’ Geled the, conduciet Rei | ‘Painters and sculptors, as well as poets and novelists, recognize it CHAPTER IV. enough to move a man of [nett day, put Aunt Aiton: greatly pet-| feeble flounces of the invalids; no love-| “‘HHe's dead!” hissed Mrs. Jarr’a/asiceb?” cried the conductor, f 7 cs 5 5 s ay elp on a fat lady for stone to my will, But I did ‘or worse, would certainly have ob-| Making, no gossip, nothing to break | mother, who was from Brooklyn, where rushed away to help on a fat not know Dr. Ray. He loved | jected to any change, nor could T Invent | the calm monotony that I have always | :he tendency is to give first ald to any|Wiom the car had stopped, a proceed: me and I had told him that I/ any plausible excuse for suggesting such | found 80 unendurable! oxeltement, because excitements occur|!ng that would not have occurred te et quickly into ity| loved him, but that was as nothing to/a thing to her. So we stayed on Into But one morning something happened |. seldom over there. him save that {t now came as a relied ‘me with, him, He|him beside his’ soul's duty, He would | the winter, Dr. Ray and I avoiding each | that put exhilaration into my blood and > he isn't dead, He's breathing |to his embarrassment. dn the nearest | have none of me! |other as much as possible all the while, [Interest Into my existence once more. Ee ‘Gey, whata the row?,. Whole deine » beside him, am We went home together, ‘oft in alfieeing from each other down the cor-|Man—the raison d'e appeared again | heavily,” said Mra. Jarr. acaae -gaival want’ noc aie cin raed ae silence like a black cloud. rally, I 'rdors as frantically as if we had been | Upon the little stage of my destiny. He's dying, then,” sal . Jor ? ite, Passing by an open door I was] mother. “Shake him!" conscious that he was tho centre of The Man Who Wins startled by a low, gasping cry from| «gnake tn yourself,” replied Mrs.| ome recent excitement. By Emory J. Haynes Continued.) d come to a little park, and he ¢ draw! sank ben: ‘and respect it. : _ HONOR SYSTEM EXAMINATIONS. OLUMBIA’S experiment in conducting the exam- inations of the senior science class under the “honor system” will be watched with an interest augmented by the fact that the class in civil eng neering voted against a proposal to have their ex aminations conducted in that w: hy should there have been this divergenc ee eo time the vol I'll measure my power now! And that—neither more nor less—was | the thing that, for the moment and | purpose, I called love! ine tric grass ar a mo within the room beyond. Turning | “ Mrs. Jarr drew herself up and looked paw e man fall, almost fainting, into a| Jat “I want to get off this car! , ri “ “IT tell you he has expired. Why)out of the window, but Mr, Jarrs Patient Anat tia't Sept B onreanerene doesn't this company have people to| mother-in-law had tamed too many bed to the chair had been too great an|close the eyes of those who expire on|men in her time to permit a stranged exertion for him. I hurried to his side, | their cars? The B. R. T. does that much | in the street caf to sneer at her. + gave him brandy from a flask on the |¢oy ys} replied Mrs. Jarr's mother. “Oh, | “If people will go to sleep Uke ¢@ table near by, seized a bottle of eau-|.. may say what we please about the/ horned ow! and keep thelr eyes oper 4 through the and_us until the of little leat | . vs and patches of yellow lght. I traced the pattern with my. i of views between M . « ce and vt ‘ at the two classes of ingenuous youths educated by the same alia | parasol over and over again. 1 think I Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), de-cologne and, bathed me anina ‘nia | Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company! It] what can they expect?” she asked. Ve tor? Jcould trace it now, so vivid ts my re- 4 lente alk bound eeamnan ts thet-can Heal may not be yery atcommodating to liv-| “I'll bet you're a Suffragette! A long bos 4 ties aise membrance of that day. Sane or Insane—Which? )\205 the taiance between proper hope-| 1 had thought only of his helplessness | ing people, tut it pays the funeral ex: | nosed Suffragette!” cried the man, in ¢ an. The honor system of examinations is in no way above the level | Vr May, with his chin fallen upon ho | taivens ana ihuvive dreams, Im tact cne;wnen I ruaied to his aid. ‘The most |penecs of ail persona who expire on Its} voice that indicated he wasn't attald a i ‘ ' si" jis breast, sat very still, as if he wero is crazy on the e eck jinveterate coquette will forget her be- m it runs over. I'll say that | any woman, not even his own wife, of ordinary human virtue, It is not essentially different from the | having an argument qith his own soul. | He is the one who! attempt to preserve this balance is the guilements when the mother ts roused | much for it!" aire Jerch moter Hod & 8 per ; £4 t last he turned to me, and from hi in self very nich, 0 1 our = wakeful | (ir) 4 ; (eta gi! self-government system applied to rules of behavior for hoys and | figyara tase T knew tat his soul had i abe Rg ohe py ats eat SHE canmeeeon Line 4 RCRD an ona 2 eran eres, my amatl) irq, Jarr was not heeding these few | but she wasn't @ Suffragette, 7 : . J Pi | bagea fl . , or some r" J ‘ 4 rt e 7 » T. ba egirls in the George Junior Republic and in some of the public sehools. | ¥8) come again to Ufe. ‘Suppose {t were true, as the preach- (ness of this man or myself, But as he| Kind words for the B, RT, She was! “If people get delirium tremens ty Bt the schoolb: ‘feele th ip of b i i f test, wh t veer he said sadly, #1 | SOR" OKam et xo ingane this jolly par-|ers of all religions tell us, that there is |revived I saw that he was rather inter-/on her feet and signalling to the con-|public conveyances they should t& e schoolboy feele the grip of honor in a time of test, why not| could be t man, 1 know thai one mu i hinks f a }esting looking anf all the more so for | ductor, locked up!’ she snapped. “Where's ¢ , . . y Sylvia! anola is the type to engage, as it Is so|@ Supreme Mind who thinks for us ani pei coe 00 Ee UP Lenehan the university man? DOT snt ane theseetlll.!! 1 witanated, much better than melancholia, inspires us when We ask it, Would not A eae ch saianesn ciitne throten _aaet Soothes pulled ale adie 7 policeman! was bowling along, Ther 4 ‘ q » svate ni 3 A aa He went whiter than ever Ni But who can draw the line between | such a mind be able to assure our level- | tho O aorow near the end and giving it] °° 4 els: i ee, It is said that a trial of the system made in 1880 failed hecause | | It° faith and delusion, between hope, that |headedness? Indeed is there any other | , Sreerom naar tie We have a Suir do gertorel, ® coms | was no palloeman in sight, it being of honest” students would not expose those who cheated! In that| “You've taken no vows." I could | noble faculty, and insane expectations? | possible Silumination that can reveal)’ «i'm a great deal of trouble,” he said. Aa Supe real ih cae es ol hates road Some, nia Te «| pleag for @ triumph like that! Wo like the cheerful man and woman, |the safety of boundary between Insane} And then, as if he had noticed me for|“We must have jn A man whispered something to *Htatement the word honest has a humorous sound and a peculiar y soul its vows the firat mo-! 00 '*¢ ; h Fey we can notify friends and relatives.” | jate sleeper and he laughed. , | We enjoy their bright outlook and| optimism and sane? The ambitious boy | the first time: FY i { i pd to become a priest. 1 : : f ‘a "But you're not a nurse?" “But our names will get in the paper.| “Ho!” he cried, ‘It was my glas meaning. Ne rey pr neal cs ‘iil -over |@bMling confidence. dreams over the biography of Napoleon uty 10 lca \ i ——__—____-——- . {tm ae truly Bound now as T will ever) Ove now that if we did not build atr|and makes high resolves. Sot S aapds Hus 2 WB sta Oot onde" | Wer maye tomo $0 the polloe: wiatien, | o76! i AAA RARARRAAAARAADAODAAARAAAAATS | | Joanioil for and searched hts }casties we should never have a hut to] That i@ sane. But in the stress of] | ‘tf Yon pele, . maybe to the Coroner, 5 Of oust Te People with glass eyes shouldn* { face, 1 saw there all that @ woman |ahelter us, We confess that our rosy | young manhood, overworked and reso-|"Aier Woes Yer, 1 1, 8 goment, [us set off quietly! impe! rs] rido in street cars!” snapped Mra | ' 4Letters From the People} [sisia siete sen tie tice or a'man |reun tay a thousand times disap- Mr Gnas Corts into Gia eopill| tim Dame Mae) inet: Ibe Oren | sez, ice Mp etree 4 1 knew, for Thad + t before, ,,)Poluted us, yet without the dream we Napoleon.” That is the way |wora and withdrew. ‘There were not many people in the ‘or old women with false teeth,” re i “Is | you belong + T exclaimed With ) would have died in our hard luck days. this paranoia, Rest? He can-|” a week later I passed him in the cor-|car, but by this time the attention of| plied tho brute, oy ay ‘The Hudson ‘Tunnel an axis rapidly, it has the tendency to exultant convie! a ee »w how to distinguish between sane|not. Stop and cool off? Y but he|ridor and we bowed slightly to each) aii was concentrated upon Mrs. Jarr/ When Mr. Jarr came home that even i Lge tne Astor of The ¥vening World get aa far away from the center of the |, But he never wavered: “I belong to oo te a tha mentally unsound {is in the thick of the battle and must|other, He was tiobbling along on &/ang ner mother and the man with the/ing Mrs, Jarr complained of such 4 i evisg, K." complains of having to pay|axis ay poss! Thus it is that the) “°C, “OS and confronted: each other, The most| fight a few days more. Now, suppose | crutch. The next ony after that i walked staring eye opposite. headache (hat ahe couldn't ainaimcaia fare on the Hudson tunnel, Now that) wheel tries to spread out and, as th and oh! I wanted him th Pain, real | uniicely ons are common. he bows to God and asks strength, |! the garden, and he ca: mping OUts| “ing conductor came forward. iiathawaieiate ee Jersey State commuters have the ts a re ance (it being held in posi- | ~ surprises of good fortune are as| clearness of thought, self control, Sup- (To Be Continued.) ceninnninneiianaveiedibidaaickads ennnnee. mummrecns ce Pee 1) 4) Hon By the eehiee of the wheel), the! ‘ astonishing as calamities, Success ts in| pose he bows humbly, willing to accept RRR RA AAR RAAAAARAAARAAAANAAAANARR RANA, clean, comparatively well ventilated suy-| whirling of the wheel causes it to re- | A Painful Task. the majority of cases a hair's breadth | success or defeat, as a Great Father , 7 fray to Hoboken in the quick time of|tain the position In which it has been affair. Cause and effect are but little|sees best. Do you doubt that a kind Hed ill I he Day Ss oo Stories | f feout ton minutes they certainty hare meet er oe nee Some tn the known. ‘The sclence of prosperity is|Creator could, if He would, save that edgev e H 9 9 right to kick, considering the evil | “loop-the-loo) jor the car as it very far from being as exact as chem-| man's reason and steady his talking Edit x nee ie cencaearae "> b 7 ce of twin wlaters ¢ H Smelling slow ferries which were the|Specd* down the steep incline acquires istry. We must expect great things or| judgment? And do you doubt that He or Helpful Wife. i dread of every one using them, espe- hush speed that'dt has a t noy to we shall never attempt great tasks. would, if thus asked? HERE was a man here to-day,” says| ‘Good morning, my dear'miss,” he said, meet “Rady tn the foggy seas out, but it ts forced to go Jt is not true that life verges on the| He that formed the eye shall He not By John L. Hobble “ the teiptul wife, to the, brutal bus Sa Gat oe He tee in Sittaabone Sadan on Tr, NORCKER. because that | only insane line all the time. But at least eee? He that created the brain shall | aSmmwwwwwwwmmnmmnnnnnnnnae! I band, “and, be just made me angry | St ng me “ fe AL it is true that the greatest good {s a He not save it? GOME joker, we hear are 60 thick we furniture and things, "He claimed that be knew pentih tle, the peti he had, the 2 ae aoe hanes you and that he had asked you vised. Iasse oo 0 ace of ‘the gr [fo the Editor of The Evening World | A avin Dilemian + cal Fee Fone “ata adie fi Physician and sald most modestly Is ét true that a young man born in ‘. 7 . . : _ you sald we didn’t have over $200 w the one what's out walking,”"—Phils ft To the KAitor of The Evening World ‘ RS, LENNIS got a divorce tn Chi- | {ou said te akin have T eS delphi Times, fae Wasted Stace need not have nature | gaia" ke to have me Do You Realize You Are an Explosive? MP Succinate suencaped tom | n'a sista pal a Buzation papers in order to vote, Mt! radery wh parents help : 4 | the elty while still a widow, and that our piano cost a thousand last’ month, ST TEt nee ie becomes of age |TONteT# WHO are naronta help mo d HE human pody contains no fewer twenty pounds contains nearly one and | the elty ay 4 thousand tat moots | Why He Wouldn't Pay ‘ SUT caatd ita uct cauuratisen? | O50, 4 OY 1 years of age, with | than four substances which are so @ half ounces of magnesium, two ounces | nrogp gays that we should be|! Por Mar eA re wil Ra Ss wataae 0G ec . 32ve0, hls parents are not naturalited? | eairiy good marks, has not succeeded In inflammable that, Ina pure state, of eodium, and nearly two and a half Koneroud and. feel toward vour| lve, fie or alx thousand dollars’ worth, He Not and tired and his ar was 80 chowde Ai M+ | graduating from school, H not | they will ‘go off” by spontaneous com- ounces of potassium, The first of these, | ¢riends as we did before we knew them a Pet Pane be haa hard work collecting the farest a One Iden of the Gyroscope, | want 10 go buck to school because his pustion, For instance, there is phos-|a substance of silvery whiteness, 18 80 | so well, iataats ha henna and that te fie on NUCH te <atwe ona and saw a oan fan the Editor of The Evening World | x nt afford to keep him there, | lesen The body of a person Weighing | readily and flercely combustible that it} had been talking to you and 1 oll eh coer ae OR ree yeas In reply to the query:, “Why does a| n they want him to go back. | one hundred and twenty pounds con- {has to be kept tightly corked in bottles | [KE REY iareat Boots! ‘That waa the tax investigator!” | wid, combatively: You'll have to give i. 24 e@yroscope wheel work against gravity?” in front of him, should! tains twenty-two ounces of this sub-)to prevent tt from Igniting of its own | Es tariff Senator ts as useles | chicago 2. Ste for irl” © can say, I think, that according to! k wnd graduate? It is very | A@ye stance, which, as everybody knows, |accord, Sodium will take fire if thrown | common people ax a Swiss cheese sand- One of the Twins ‘ said the man, calmly, “but Xow Yaelence, the fact that the gyroscope re- | difficult to obtain a position without) ,, 1 think readily takes fire of its own accord if|into water, and so likewise will potas- wich in @ prohibition State, J . pint: flown Gasihd’ tues Maine an upright position—in fact, any | graduating, Or should he leave school Does your doctor st Nk YOU! exposed to the air, It Is combined with! sium—the latter with great violence,| Jp paRKs, the dentist, guarantees BR, 8, WEIR MITCHELL, alienist co dyctor his rights and the man eale h ni itism 7 ' noted author, frequently stops children | ly 4 |. At last the latter said, ‘hen spinning, depends entirely |and look for a position? Any advice | have rheumatism me to make the bones, taking the! finally exploding and throwing . a ‘that he can do such a poor Job on moves eke, Dennen ee Mone reason hg 1 ayia tad, with @ 1 i a pewmltnen) section. ‘That is, that Li Dyecdiog Lipo be greatly iavere Aer! son anes a lot of pains to/ ¢orm of phosphate he! Die Ay of a shower of sparks into the air, } Your wile's ‘teeth that she will keep her psig ‘al’ is seoesialy fond a. i on that she is not mine aud she is pot with mg gg Whe an object 1 naa ee writer, convince bg he ey Vaumen being weigh! dred and “gay ! mouth closed, * eas enous to chatter, time Boston Record, ih } :