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About Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1903)
l A FORFEITED OTmPATHFDHAAh ; 01 Lri w iiLmiuuis LJ LMEIl Hardin),' picked up an en velope addressed to the firm o which he was senior partner, and which he found lying upon Ilia own desk, the letter Itself being placed va die for-future reference. Something about the handwriting re called a memory that was haunting and elusive. "A woman's fist, evidently," he said to himself, and tucked the envelope Into a pigeon-hole only to keep think ing of it to the utter exclusion of more important topics. Then he took It out of its hiding place, and examined it carefully. "Where have I seen that handwriting before? It is as familiar as a breath of the old lilac tree that stood at the door of tbe south porch at home. I wish these vagrant memories would not come disturbing me with their A TALL, STOCT WOIIAN. vague hints of a happy past. I must find out about this letter." He touched a bell and the head clerk responded to the summons. "Where is the letter which this con tained V asking Harding, as he held up the empty envelope. "I will bring it. The womau who wrote it wanted us " , "Oh, did a woman write It? Pretty good business hand, eh, Simpson?" "Yes, sir; and she's a good business woman, too, 1 should say. Her hus band bought a block of buildings on the South Side, and intending coming to the city to live, but he died sud denly, and the widow prefers to re main on their farm, near Omaha. So we are commissioned to sell the prop erty here. I'll fetch the letter." The explanation, however, had sat isfied Elmer Harding that he had no personal interest in the matter, and he took the letter when It was handed him In a perfunctory manner, and did not even take the trouble to read it. As a mere matter of form, he glanced at the signature and gave a great start. He knew then why his middle-aged heart had thumped so violently at sight of the handwriting, why mem ory had evoked sweet perfume and wafts of incense out of a dead past. Here was a name to conjure with. Rose Atkinson! She who had been Hose Boynton, the flower that all were praising, and the only one that had ever bloomed for him. Hose of the prairie, rose of his heart And she had married that red-headed chump, Ed Atkliison, while he, Elmer Harding, was getting ready to start In business, and then go back and ask her to marry him. He knew he had no one to blame but himself, he felt sure it was with Itose a case of a bird In hand, but for long years he was sore and ag grieved over her defection, as he chose to consider It. And now she was a widow. He read the letter then and found it concise, well-worded business epis tle, quite unlike anything be would have expected of Rose, who had been diffuse and undecided In the old days. It' hurt him to think of her as a bus iness woman when he remembered the sweet girlishuess of her early youth, the ripple of her Roman gold hair, as he had loved to call it, the music of her merry gurgling laugh. Then he looked in tbe little mirror over his desk and saw the promontory of knowledge from which his own balr had departed, the lack-luster eyes and the heavy double chin. "You're a fool. Elmer Harding," he aid, pulling himself together with a nigh. "If she did not love you in tbe old days she would not look at yor now," and he gave bis mind to bust' Hex for the rest of that day. But on the next day be wrote her ft , letter, friendly, with an apparent bus iness motive but filled throughout ' With gentle reminders of the past, and king h:r as nn old friend to answer It and tell him of herself. He bad in formed her that be bad never married and wag devoted to old bachelorhood. He waited for an anawer with a fev erish Interest that gave a new rest to life, and when he found It await ing him at bis apartment be was too brtrwd to have It addressed to the of fee be trembled like a leva-sick boy aa be opened It The letter was dev erty written, leaving aiaeh to the taatginatioa ef Ita reader, facia ware gamer toadied on. "Several chil ism," a feed fam aad anaay la tbe m iff BertteeL Kbe weald Ct fU ef bar laarHaia. bat ha ; rrHKZxmi - aSai ft the '-c fa te bar ! ent widowed state and hurriedly clos ed her letter as If memories over powered her. Elmer Harding rever ently kissed her signature and mur mured: -"Bear--little Rose: That slight, fragile creature, struggling with the care of a growing family! Why, she is nothing but a child herself. I won der if she has kept that perfect color she had, like the flower for which she was named. Dear, shy, sensitive Rose, how I would like to see you!" Other letters were exchanged, and finally a meeting between the two was arranged. Mr. Harding had business in that part of the country. .Senti mentalist though he might be, he was enough like his fellow men to be able to conjure up business In the Desert of Sahara if necessary, and be wrote to Mrs. Atkinson that be would be In her neighborhood and would call upon her at such a time, but the little god of prudence restrained him from making any open avowal of marriage until he could see his dear one face to face. Hut he was a very Impatient lover. He reached Omaha a day In advance of the time he was expected, but took an immediate outgoing train for the town on the border of which the At kinson farm was located. There was one car a day, and Harding seated himself In the back of It. pulling his hat over his eyes, but closely observ ant of surroundings. A noisy crowd was entering, and he watched them, as, besides himself, they were the only passengers. A tall, stout woman and half a dozen hatchet faced children, loaded with parcels and lugging bask ets, struggled In and were soon hag gling over seats. "Here, you children, get into your seats and stay there! You, Ed, let your sister alone. Wait till I get home I'll teach you not to scrap in the cars. Elmer, stop eating them grapes." "My name ain't Elmer," said the boy with a grin. "Yes, It is, and don't you forget it Your new pa won't take no back talk, if I do. He'll soon size you up." "Will our new pa pull our hair the way our old pa did?" This from a pre cocious girl with a shock of fiery red hair. "You bet he will, Reddy. My, I won der how he looks. Say, ma, has he got red hair?" "No, I reckon It's gray now, like mine, though mebbe be hasn't changed as much as I have, seeing he hasn't a lot of young ones to worry his life HE READ 1I1F. LETTER. out. He couldn't hold a candle to your pa when we was all young together. I but mebbe he's Improved some. Do- rindy Atkinson, stop pulling Clara's hair. If you don't behave you can't go to meet your new pa to-morrow." "He ain't our pa yet" whined Do riudy, whereat her mother shook her. Increasing the florid red of that good woman's face to a dark purple hue, while she renewed the threat, "Wait till your new pa comes!" At the next Btatlon the man In the back of the car sneaked out and took the first train back to Omaha. Chi cago Record-Hera Id. Windows as Firc-Hpreaders. In a paper read at St James' Hall before the Society of Architects, Ellis Marsland, honorary secretary of the British Fire I'reventlon Committee, stitcd that unshuttered windows are the main cause of the spread of a con flagration. Lantern slides of the Bar bican fire emphasized his conclusions, and showed that If, as recommended, all such openings were closed every night by Iron, hardwood or asbestos blinds, though the spread of a fire might not be entirely prevented, Its progress would be retarded. As It Is, Immediately the hose plays on tbe heated and unprotected glass It smash es and the flames fly inward and on ward. He suggested that the Insur ance companies might well encourage this form of protection by reducing fees to clients who Introduced It, or there might tie legislation making it compulsory. London Express. Popcorn I Kicrilent food. "l'opcorn Is one of the best foods we have; people don't begin to appreciate Its value," said Mrs. Mary I). Cham bers, In the course of a lecture on cereals to a class of women Id domes tic science at the library building lu Brooklyn. And then, seeing tbe sur prise oa tbe faces of the women before her, she went on: "Let your children eat all tbe pop corn they waat It contains a valua ble oil, has high calortflc power, and la mostly starch cooked thoroughly by high pressure ef ati Bow the girls like to look at a bride's J i- xZHsr -yaffil THERMOMETER MAKING. How Moiling and Freezing Point Are Found and Degree Marked. The making ol a thermometer may be either a delicate scientific operation ' or one of the simplest tasks of the skilled mechanic, according to the sort of thermometer made. With the ex tremely sensitive and minutely accur ate Instruments designed for scientific uses great care is taken and they are kept in stock for months, sometimes years, to be compared with instru ments that are known to be trust worthy. But so much time cannot be I spent over - the- -comparatively-- cheap thermometer In common use, and these are made rapidly, though always care fully. Mercury Is generally used for scien tific Instruments, but most makers pre fer alcohol because It Is cheaper. The alcohol is colored red with aniline dye, which does not fade. The thermom eter maker buys his glass tubes In long strips from the glass factories. The glass blower on the premises cuts these tubes to tbe proper lengths, and with his gas Jet and blowpipe makes the bulb on the lower end. The bulbs are then filled with colored alcohol and the tubes stand for twenty-four hours. Ou the following day another workman holds each bulb iu turn over a gas jet until the colored fluid by Its expansion entirely tills the tube. It then goes back into tbe hands of the glass blow er. He closes the upper end and turns the tifi backward to make a little hook, which will help keep the tube in place in the frame. The tubes rest until some hundreds of them, perhaps thousands, are ready. Then the process of gauging begins. There are no marks on the tube and the first guide-mark to be made is tbe freezing point 32 degrees Fahrenheit This Is found by plunging the bulb Into melting snow. No other thermom eter Is needed for a guide, for melting snow gives Invariably the exact frcez ing point. This Is an unfailing test for any thermometer when accuracy may be suspected. Rut melting snow is not always to be bad and a little ma chine resembling a sausage grinder Is brought Into use. This machine shaves a block of lee Into particles, which answer the purpose as well as snow. When the bulbs have been long eno'tgh In the melting suow a workman takes them one by one from their bath, seiz ing each so that bis thumb nail marks the exact spot to which the fluid has fallen. Here be makes a scarcely per ceptible mark upon the glass with a fine file, and goes on to the next The tubes, with the freezing point marked on each, now go Into the hands of another workman, who plunges the bulb into a vessel filled with water kept constantly at 90 degrees. This is marked like the others, and the tube is now supplied with these guide marks, each 32 degrees from the next. With Its individuality thus establish ed, the tube goes Into the hands of a marker, who fits Its bulb and hook Into the frame It Is to occupy and makes slight scratches on the frame corresponding to the 32 degrees, C4 degrees and 90 degrees marks on the tube. The frame, whether It lie wood, tin or brass, goes t the gauging room, where It Is laid n a steeply sloplug lol.ta ,rl'wl av. ...U In ..,.,.1.1..-. for a thermometer of that size. A long, straight bar of wood or met al extends diagonally across the table from the lower right-hand corner to the upper left-hand corner. On the right this rests upon a pivot and on the left It rests In a rachet which lets it ascend or descend only one notch at a time. Each notch marks the ex act distance of two degrees.--London Express. BIGGEST CRAB EVER FOUND. One in Brooklyn Mime lira Over Kleven Feet in Diameter. x he biggest crab ever discovered. It Is said, Is now mounted and on exhibi tion In the Brooklyn Museum of Arts and Sciences. The natural home of this creature Is under from G0 to 4,0)0 feet of water. The crab measures 11V4 feet in diameter and for the most part It has a very Ix-autlful complexion for a erab ranging from a delicate old rose tint ou the top of the carapace and legs to a pale brownish shade on the underside. The two front legs have the usual crab claws, which are big enough to crush a man, but the others cud In narrow brown hoofs without toes. The eyes on the branches are enormously large and the feelers are as big us garden hose. The crab was tnkeu off the Japanese coast and formed a part of a collec tion mode by I'rofessor Bashford Dean, of Columbia College, last year, and It was presented to the Brooklyn museum by Eugene G. Blackford. It took more than a month to mount It. It is supposed that tbe giuut crabs grow to twelve feet In diameter, says the Detroit News-Tribune, but the one In Brooklyn Is the biggest ever cap tured. Not many of them are cap turednot more than ten or twelve a year although the Japanese are fish ing over the grounds where they are found all the time. Tbe Japanese fishermen set lines sev eral miles In length, with many hun dreds of hooks, which are sunk to the floor of the ocean and left over night Wben the Hues are hauled In tbe next morning all manner of extraordinary things are found attached, from giant crabs to sea lilies. Kvne to Spare. , Taesma speaks up and says she la not suffering for sweet girls for brides." "Well, there Is one thing sure, and that la that none' of tbe other cities la tiuffertag from an overplus." Clcve Ud Plate Dealer. M l GOOD Short gtofte$j -, -H At nn Inquest on a case of a suicide ecently held In England, the foreman eturned this remarkable verdict: "Tbe jury an all of one mind temporarily nsaue." A solicitor for a charitable institu tion va-nt taji V'Oman'e door recently iuii asked her for a contribution. "We uave," he stated, earnestly, "hundreds it ioor, ragged and vicious children, !Ike those at your gate, and our object is " "Sir!" Interrupted the indig nant woman, "those are my children!" Mark Twain, Blnce he advertised for editorial obituaries of himself, has re ceived some very amusing contribu tions. A Baltimore admirer writes: "Some people think you are Immortal, but If you really ever do Intend to die it Is certainly your duty to go to Hades. Funny meu are needed there, but they are very small potatoes up in heaven. You have always preached philanthropy, and now yon have the chance of your lifetime to demonstrate your consistency." When speaking before the House, Reed avoided the customary tricks of the spread -eagle stump orator, and contented himself with saying what he had to say lu his own characteristic drawl, without any oratorical flourish es. Colonel W. C. 1. Breckenrldge came to Congress with the reputation of a "silver-tongued orator," and used In his speeches In the House all tbe expedients that Reed avoided. He could not speak for live minutes, even on ordinary subjects, without falling into a funereal tone that grated ex ceedingly on Reed's sensibilities. One day, when Colonel Itreckenrlilge was holding forth In his usual mournful cadences. Reed's attention was caught by the colonel's melancholy tones. Turning to a friend. Reed asked In a drawling but solemn voice: "Judge, were you acquainted with the de ceased ?" , Wben President Roosevelt received the Carlisle Indian School's crack foot ball team at Washington, D. C, he made every one of the red men feel at his ease. lie knew some of the big chiefs In some of the tribes represent ed, and when he mentioned thelr liarnes the players addressed were mightily tickled. Most of the Indians have adopted the names of white men, and those the President asked what they were called by their own people. "No need to ask you. Mr. Tomahawk," said he, beaming on the right guard; "I know what your name means." There was one player whose Iudian name was Bear. "De-lighted!" cried the President, grasping his band warmly; "I'm well acquainted with the bear family. I met some of them In Mississippi, and I know Baer, of the Reading Coal Company. He Is harder to catch than any of them. You are built like a football player. I'm glad you are not one of the bears I chased In Mississippi. They'd make good football players, too." LOOK OUT FOR HIM. Oodae the Man In Had Humor If Yon Want Good Ituruuin. "If you want to get a good bargain dodge the man who Is lu a bad hu mor," said a gentleman to a New Or leans Times-Democrat representative, "which reflection is made as a sort of prelude to a few remarks on the rela tion of mood to results lu the affairs f life. Here Is a rule which Is as broad as human nature, and quite as 3eep in Its significance. No matter what you want, how much or how Ut ile, If you are wise you will steer clear f the man who Is In a bad humor. Nine times out of ten be will give you the worst end of the bargain, If be ioes not actually skin you. There are two kinds of men to avoid when you go out after anything from a shove to a sealskin coat. One Is the man who Is always Jolly and cheerful, and the other Is the glum, disagreeable fel low. In either case you will get the little end of the deal. If anybody is to do a "Jollying" turn, you do It, and If anylwidy Is to he glum, you simply nominate yourself. If you don't you can put yourself down as an ass, and you might ns well pay the price and jo ou about your business. Instances: Here Is a barber. Ordinarily, he can give you as smooth a shave as you would core to have, lie knows his business, If you happen to catch him when he Is In the right kind of mood. Catch him when he Is off a bit, not In form, as the race horse men put It, when be Is not exactly In the 'pink of condition' mentally because of some thing which has happened to him. or because of something you have said well, you are In for a rough time and no mistake. What he will do to your face will be enough to last you a life time. Remedy: Cheer blin up. Jolly him. Throw a wad of sunshine Into his life, and make him feel that the game Is worth the caudle after all, and be will give your face a dollar's worth of attention for a dime. This Illustrates the point 1 bad lu mind. Barbers are not different from other men In tbls respect; In fact, men of nil kinds of callings are tbe same way. There Is a little lesson, after all. In these reflections. They teach us that there la much good In tbe cheerful way of doing and saying things, and a good, too, that Is not confined to spir itual uplifting. There Is a material beaeat la It all, a certain tangible food with which we may reckon im mediately. Of course, there la tbe ether type the gluai typeand H often hapHus that this mood Is needful In the consummation of a desired result Use It only when ihe end justifies the means. But tbe main point is that you must be the aggressor lu whatever mood you choose to select, and hence the admonition to beware of tbe man In a bad humor unless you can 'jolly' him out of it." BIG LANDLORDS OF IRELAND. Marqnlaof Londonderry Lead tbe Lint in Extent of Acreage. To Judge from the prominence given to Ixird Barrymore and to Colonel Saunderson .Jn .the question of the landlord-tenant conference. It might be imagined that they were almost the largest landowners In Ireland, where as neither tbe one nor the other would, In point of acreage, come among the first three hundred of the four thou sand owners of over five hundred acres who have Just been polled.. iAird Bar rymore owns 21.000 acres, and Colonel Saunderson 12..'5D2. There are twenty two Irish landlords owning more than fifty thousand acres, two of them the Duke of Devonshire and the Marquis of Lansdowne being members of the present ministry, and the marquis, with his 121,31!) acres, would seem to be. In point of acreage possessed, the largest Irish landlord. The other cab luet minister, whom most of us take to be the typical Irish landlord, the Marquis of Londonderry, shows quite small by the side of his brother mar quis, for he owns 27,4 id acres only; but as they are in lister -or, rather, In East I'lster -they produce over thirty thousand a year. One would wonder whether the big landlord may not be, after all, tbe curse that the older generation of the last century made him out to be. Scot land and Ireland for the purpose of this proposition are practically equal, yet while there are iu Ireland two-and twenty landlords owning over r.0,(KMj acres, there are in Scotland forty-seven. It may be news to many English men that one of the broadest-acred of these Scottish landlords Is the prime minister, who owns just 90,0)0 acres, with a rent roll of some 20,000. The laird of lairds Is, of course, the Duke of Sutherland, who possesses over a million and a quarter of acres, which bring him iu some 70,0W per annum. -London Chronicle. THE FLOWER OF THE ORIENT. Exquisite Gent ilit v of a Group of Jap anese People. Ir Is still true that westward the course of empire takes its way, but any one who disdains the teachings of the East must be a superficial student of human life and manners. A company of Japanese, a baron and baroness with their suite, have been visiting the United States for tbe study of certain commercial conditions. As they sailed away on a great ocean liner they showed to marked advan tage among the throng of American and English tourists. They were short swarthy, plain of feature, as we count plainness, save for one extremely pretty young wo man. But they had the manners of great nobles. They were gentle of bearing, considerate of the claims and the pleasures of others, low-voiced, un conscious or seemingly unconscious of rude stares or noisy comment. Their courtesy among themselves was beautiful to watch. It was no ticeable that the radiant girl was not more devotedly attended by the men than were the middle-aged women, who hud no slightest pretension to beauty. Among the crowd of loud-sp 'liking. pushing, self-sntisiied dwellers In this Western Hemisphere this little group of Easterners were like some white, still bloom of one of their own ex quisitely blossoming trees the final product of ages on ages of the culti vation that forgets nothing, omits noth ing that may enhance the charm of social life and Intercourse. Henalor's Onc-Horo Hack. Senator Dolliver, of Iowa, according to the Pilgrim, tells this story at his own exjeuse, as Illustrating the pit falls that beset a man of modest means at the national capital: "On one occasion I was Invited to at tend a social function given by a high official. I went and had a delightful time, concluding that Washington so cial life was not a thing to be In the least afraid of. This conclusion was reached, by the way, Just as I was taking leave of the host "A liveried servant approached me and asked If my carriage was in wait ing and whether it was a single or double conveyance. Out of considera tion for a lean pocket book 1 had or dered a cab rather than a two horse carriage. I hud the pleasure of hear ing the servant shouting to the car riage driver: "'Senator Dolllver's one-horse hack! Senator Dolllver's one horse hack!' "The man then came to me, and, with his bend high In the air, an nounced: 'Your hack's waltlu'. Sena tor Dolliver.' " Hupply and Demand. "Extry!" shouted the dirty faced newsboy with the foghorn voice. "All 'bout tbe double murder and suicide!" "Extra edition:" piped fhe other newsboy. "Philanthropist gives a mil lion dollars to found a hospital!" But the boy with the double murder and suicide edition sold all tbe papers. Chicago Tribune. The Aatute Farmer. "Kilns Wiggins has got a new kind of health food he's feeding tbem city folks, Malvlny." "What's thatr "Last winter's bay." A woman may be a good talker aad till have aa Impediment la bet thoughts. WHAT HE SAW IN MONTANA. experience of a- Ka.tern Man, Aonr the Mountain of the Waat. K Detroitcr who had been spending wo or three mouths In Molina ar ived home the other day. and when s eporter called at hi house to lu tor dew him the little affair was found to ,e typewritten and all ready for In fant delivery. It reads as follows: 1 gained fifteen pounds. Haven't felt so well for ten urs. -Climate of Montana Is the most glo ioiis in the world. Saw many Indians. Saw taany In- imns untying pner. "Bought an Indian blanket to bring lome. After boiling It for a veek or i0 it will be left out about forty nights u freeze. "Bought several Indian arrows stalu (d with blood. Didn't ask whether It nas human or cow's blood. They never liake any explanations in Montana. "Rode a bucking broncho. L'sual re mits followed. Broncho also broke bis leek at the same time. "Was impressed by the mountains, 'lave returned home dissatisfied with Michigan because she has none. "Saw many genuine cuwlsiys. Was rather disappointed to find most of hem dt aeons of churches, but was as Hired that th y couldn't help it. "Was out for -t .ly bears several limes, but obtained no Interviews. Was .old that lllis was t!ie season when they retire to the tops: of the highest rees to hibernate. 1 did not argue the matter. They never argue iu Moli lalia. "Heard the howl of a mountain lion jne evening when returning to camp. Wes Informed that he was howling to pass away Ihe time, mid that he prob ibly hadn't beard of my being out :hi're. Made no remarks. Remarks lou't go in Montana. "Saw the tracks of an elk. Might bave seen the elk who made the tracks if I had followed the trail three or four weeks longer. Was neither encouraged nor discouraged by the people. They let you do as you want to in Montana. "Saw a man hung for stealing a horse. It wasn't clear whether It whs a horse or a steer, but ns he wanted to lie hung they didn't split hairs over It. The people of Montana are nn accom modating lot They would have hung tne had I ri-qucsted It. "This is all. Do not fail to speak of me as an eminent citizen and one largely interested In the future of De troit, and see that the proofs of this article are read twice mid are clear of mistakes." Detroit Free Press. f f uuv Tiir invic TOiLiuirn t.iii iml. ILK1.J ni ;iiui-l.i z. Savages are supposed to have keener senses, especially a keener sense of sight, than civilized races. The author of "Idle Duys in Patagonia" docs not" accept this theory. He believes that savages have no keener senses, but that they pay closer attention to What comes within the range of their per ception. As nn Instance of quick re sponse to an Impression, hi tells tbe following story: On March 12, lnni, a company of hunters were ca:;;p!:;g beside a gruv of willows In Patagonia. Alwiut 9 o'clock that evening, while they were seated round the fire roasting their ostrich meat, Sos.i suddenly sprang 'to his feet and held his oicu hand high above bis head for some moments. "There is not a breath of wind blow ing." he exclaimed, "yet the leaves of the trees are trembling! What can this portend'" The other stared at the trees, but could see no motion, and they begun to laugh at him. Presently he sat down again, remarking that the trem bling had ceased; but during the relt of the evening be was very much dis turbed in his mind. He remarked re peatedly that such a thing hud never happened lu his exierleucc before; for, he wild, he could feel a breath of wind iR'fore the leaves felt It, a nd there had been no wind. He feared that it was a warning of some disaster about to overtake their party. The disaster was not for them. On that evening occurred the earthquake which destroyed the distant city of Mcwloza and crushed twelve thousand people to death beneath the ruins. That the subterranean wave extended east to the Plata and southward Into Pat Hgonla was uflerwurd known; for In Ihe cities of Kosarlo ami Buenos Ayres clocks stopped, and a slight shock whs also experienced In the Carmen on tbe Ulo Negro. Hired C'urrlaaes. Every year hired carriages sre be coming more In demand In New York. An amazingly small number of the pri vate vehicle seen on fhe avenue in the afternoons or In the park belong lo the persons who are lu them, The con venience of hired vehicle I enough to compensate many persons for the loss of the pleasure of owning their own horseflesh. They are to be hud at all hours, and persons who hesitate fo take out their own horses at certain tlrnes have no hesitation In rnaklic- ut- of hired horses. Then - hero Is the question if ailing horses, which never need troti ble a person who hire his carriage. If ne horse I sick, another Is alum-.' . hand. The dllllctjlly of keeping satisfac tory coaenmen is also transferred to the shoulders of the stahlek,.i.i.. tables (bat make a specialty of letting u, u.r arnaon sre always will ing to provide an entirely new ai.i.t. whlcb Is, of course, kept eiclualvelr wi me person who has en. (aged It. and with tlx. Ibere Is said to be no more expense. Lota of poor men are tka .kiu. ef ether atea'a fortunes. 4- ..-.