Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 13, 1911, Page 11, Image 11

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TIIE BEE: OMAHA TUESDAY; JUXE 13, 1911.
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Serious
i ,f . j. i.
History in Comic Vein .
NtlrtnrlTiww1r'HKl dug up- a tew
relic. nliU annon halls arid rim bottles
uptowh';thd thr rdy." said Phow-Me-
owtu, , in nninj.. ana tony Disionan,
BKTbvhf elseMO remark that they
I ar remind era
") didn't km
f fh BrltUlf eornr"it!on.
now . vHwfitl .mjr occupation.
rsewpt coming over her and rltlcuitng
tltsj ' ssnery. boi ft'seemB 'they did some
ovar (mum en'mayeti Into a)I tha flat wheh'
th Nfrw. Tartars -wr away fo 4i. sum
mer, thereby -fevsrstrii "the 'present order
of things. ,whn thLonofrs ar atovtyg
at to let New -Tor e Chleag. mora la.
Th papers say l.tt tThlcairo folks are oh
thy way to London bow. That'll ba about
enough to atart a 4ak 4rrs an tha Btrand
any-war. 1f Hat a riot. -.
"At tha' ttnia uf the Prlttsh oeeirp:tlm
however, tlierax waanl any eorenattoa shew
d things wara pretty duM an Ptaeadllty
avenue,'.5 " T -
" "Beastly alow, here."sald jona Britisher.
" "Let's go warf occupy New York;
whAtr' - . ; "h.,. .
" Tawtt t . 4o " it , objected the othara.
Heve bee. 4 oaa fr. .?.-' . . T i
"But tha first Britisher stuck to his
plan. bald. theoi aJJ,oivith. point of h.1
ere;laM . rul ' toltt'tifcara Newi Torlt-waa
botmir abMt-iMtnit Mnti' alnnmar ra
aort. Uir naally ouht tQ.go over and oc
cupy M awhila. - -
" -aiiUlea; ha aryhed. 'we'ra booked to
do thla baUy ocrupatlon'n.unt , eometlme,
and U m!h aa wall ba now.' .
"8a thay fhartvHd'a boat, and after-a
plaaaant llttla eair Thef " arrived off the
Battery. Having .admired, tha Statue of
Ubrty. tha occuplera expressed a desire
to annex It for A.jouren(r A taka It .home
wlOlthem. f J.HKlZ'.- '
7mpoaslble." said tha collector of tha
pea, vjt aetmin -to Patrick Henry. Ha
aakad fof It tn-st.-' -' -
"They " apenl' fte ' flrtt' trtffftt ii BaWary
,?rl and tha next day Bent word, to tha
chief of police- that -they-were ready to
Tcupy KeWjTrfc , , f
MUe.Mirdtiolsky,
Tkewer riw WD Parla had a nine days'
jrundacr fi .tne",ca,se of Mile. Helen' Mlro
polBkyj- a n-yeaa-otd' Polish girl, who paased
her . law .axamUiationa and aa admitted
Ite practice at'thaWrla be, thla being ona
.at thw'very rare- Instances of a woman
ever ' achieving ihia distinction. What
made' tha caaa aif. tha mofe.'ntereetlns to
tha aovelty-lovtng Pariatana waa that Sflle.
Miropoiaky happened to ba aattreeneiy beau-F
tifuL Aa a rfit )f .this tUc crowits thert
flocked to hear her plv?ad were ten times
aa great aa theywtfunr havj been If mere
curiosity to bean a wornAn ' advocate-had
been tha tnoeatrwa. '
hfow- Mi:a. Sirropolsky uot content with
arguing for hen clients nf delighting tha
area .af all thai ''court, fconfoa forard aa
the;, ppaaeaaoQ) fit ultraniern views ra
gardinx tha adoaatlon at 'young fftrte. Ia
i'roKraa. a niw axialafe tnagaalna Wboaa
d-Ur , Is a wojnaa. tha ..acautif ul young
PnU aihAMa U.'K. I k ti J . .
aa.lwf act lops; '; Her rtirnarks also show
that ih On -mm ' mnn .i naw
by: tio moons 'confined Xp England and
Ant Wlca, witft their auiffragettea. hut la
agltaiaig tha': Iatln world- of woman aa
well. ' w
Tba (lay for -wasnea to bet educated merely
to make goodr 4vea-aai bouaekaeperar 4a
Past, affirm .MOm, Miropoiaky. It went.
Mvar ti' return, aa soon a women began
to Btrtke out fa themselves In aeonomla
eom petition with'' men. Women who ,'lnsst
a ratnalntatg jhalf Ignorant; will feei' tbam
elvea more and more "out of It" beside
their working :alMera. Thuaf little By llttla.
atA " - ; '
I j ! J
?Eair Women of
Thai 7 wlf of Athe fir A preaident never
lhredbi the Wijite House at Waahlngton,
aitkoitgh that mauuloa was named In her
honor ator her 'forrner4; hpme In Virginia.
Daring tha first administration, whan the
eaitltaA waa NwTrk CttyMra Waihiog
taa. In tha famaus ryauklt. beuae. -at
No. 1 yeaadUin sisaiie where she waa 'A
grexrtotis Koatvqs.. mod.elUnd. her levees., fs
N far a' might be In a new government, after
ftha feahie Eurepeap courts. ; ' ''
Hoy, slmpl 'aipme ot ihaea faatlvltiea
war ia shown ba tha atery that at 'one of
her . frlday venlng receptions as ' the
hands f tha (lock approached 1 lira
Waaadagtoat remarked, -try husband usu
ally retire at W clocks and J. ()low
seoa 'aitar - '
Mra.-Waahlngtaa waa not a tall woman,
bat 'Bh LB4 TeeartlruI figure, agreeable
faaturea. with dark baael eyea and brown
hair, whaeai turned. to a aoft. .pretty gray
ta later ycehra. -VMlavnot-handsoma, ahe
waa sjentta r4vw4nBrasnd m very at.trac
ttva woman with great. UuH. and George
Waahlngton. during their, long married Ufju
loans in icr A.Mtfaesui neipmata vpan
wnom ba depended constantly. . A - t
A guast who breakfaated with tha preet
dant and his family la KM wrote.
'The reallnf ,aefraed tbeughtful
and waa slaia!taawjhitoj;' hiual'f .
the result of much reflection. Mrs.
Washington herself made tea and eoffee
far' us. On tha tabla-avere two email plates
of Sliced tongue.' kr.ff dry toasf, bread a no
bat tar, but n broilad' fMl. sat la the" gear
eral cuatoca hero. 6 he struck me aa being
something older than C. veatdent. though
I usuierataad they were both bora the same
jo.r.5.
-1- - ' -- -.--i
TL Wginnino;
IKtMIM'l Mill IM.H1
im7Tliiiii,!li!
a? -on !-:. e-
r f
The Britlh
tWnpat.ios).
" "Lock up the rUrod atocka.' aaya the
chief. .'TMnfe'a a -BHtlnh ayndlcaia bare.'
First they occupid a stxhtseetnc 'bua,
and then occupied an much of the atten
tion a tha natlvea that K waa neoeasary to
tall' out tha reserve. .
. "Stuffy plapTthy' voted- Broadway,
'luat be.one'et tile. rn4 npna ' we've
heard ao much about.- I ay, ma a;ood man,.
run' us up to Tellowstbna park.' "
"They conferred a few beheflte.' auch aa
ntrodurtna; tha English chop and tta tr(m
mtnffa to Mlttla eld Manhattan, and they
also left a few recipes for clothes.
"Then the regular Inhabitants came baok
to'- tow, and there' belnjr nothing- left to
occupy, jthi visiting delegation went home.
"Strikes me. though.' there naa been a
British occupation J) era In, New Tork aver
alncr." ' ' ' : - . . . .
'How'b thatr f askedJ - .
. "CoIleUnrf Jkjtiri6ar dollars," aald KhoW-
l.(Copyrtght. 1911, by tha N. T. Herald Ca.)
Young but Valiant , .
a total revolution will come about In tha
cheorlea regarding a young woman's edu-
Uon .
Her education, first of all, muat ba use
ful.' ' That woman ia worthy of such a
thlng'.Mlle. Miropoiaky ia firmly convinced.
"It haa often been said that weman was.
born 'for mental frills and dreams, not for
science and ' abstract atudiea." aha aaya.'
"but It ia sufficient to glance about a -bit
to,- sea -that --tha tsuth-hv quite otherwtaw.
Tbla truth; la of great Importance to fera
hilntstn.' 1 1
Jav-aisBoat always mora realistic than that
of man. By that Z mean that It gets ctoeev
to fact, ia more dlapoaed toward practjeaj.
aolntiona. further removed from enhaer
ftal Iniutgiaiaxs. and. In aoma ware fwhiett
Si. alike a4 advantage and a UmltaVmll
h less IdeallaUe- . . m- 4
J'pften, In an asaamblagai of wotpe'dj I
am- struck by tha practical character -of
Vhat is diacuaaed; In caaes where? 'men.'
especially young men, get tangled B In .a
network of more or leas theoretical- tdaaav
women go atralght to tha point, wlthoot
circumlocution. Cannot you (aa L-cas)
give Instancea of frivolous young- womeau
who, having become widows all of a sadden.-
are placed, without ..warning., -face to
face with tha- management 'at a fortune.
kaad act ao. ably as to aatoniah even those
who imagined that they knew them well?"
Therefore, argues the young Polish law
yer, a' practical education for women win
not ba at variance with their natural, char
acter, but will strengthen tha- practical
tendencies. , .-
the White House
year. She waa extremely simple by bar
dress, and wore a very plain cap, ' with
bar gray hair turned-up under It."
- Mrs. Washington- waa Martha Damdrldge
Cuetia. tha fascinating young widow of a
wealUrfr TlrgWa" pTamaV rad "tha mother
of two children when sha married the man
who ws t6 become tha leading figure In
American history and who was then simply
a Vlralnla eounavy gentleman. No chil
dren were bom -at h4s econd marriage.
(Ctopyfight, 1L bytha r: T. Herald Co.).
Cast Iron plows -were manufactured in
BooUabA: In'lISC-Jba,' Crat patant for a
plough in the United Statea waa granted In
tm. t " '-"" '', ',
Ta have too many platea on the tabla
means guaata. ' " -
Only a Daschund
Ml ".
5 ; -. : ' I ,
J ;. ,.
L ;v - . 5
"
Mrs.
CJ. FATE
LprettaTs Looking
.It was en of those surprises with which
life lav crammed full and brimming ever.
The vqIo was, I mean. For her bat was
a queer little, dear Uttl bonaety affair.
And, at on side and Just above two soft
turfs that looked as If they had escaped
-by -accident and wer enjoying their deli-
cat liberty In the aetgnoornood of bar
left ear. there waw a cluattr af the palaat
pink - reeebuoa in a floral frame of for-gnt-me-oots.
And her di ess wag' s dain
tily conservative, yet so. discreetly provo
cative, toot .-. T .....
The men ta the party "g!anct-d. looked
and were ready to luve. Her charm awept
Ilka a perfume ever us all. And shs had
eyes of azure and nps as softly red as the
streaks on tha whit petals of the spring
beaut Ira 8he was winning. . Sh was allur
ing. Sha was entrancing. She was all of
the delightful .things we try to say when
Wa utter, "'charming!" with rolled-up eyea
and wonder'-rapt voice.
Really, it's, the greatest rarity to see so
delicious a girl! And there never wa a
hungrier set of individuals wh feasted
their optica that devoured' her were oan
aibalistie. Sha looked good enouta to eat!
She was Introduced to. the whole com
pany. And nothing could have more be
come her than tha slight bending of ber
fiower-facs' as each f ua was mentioned.
The . memory of a stmia. dwelt lastly be
tween bar- heavy lashes; and tha men
floundered and sunned and posed, an ana
lou to. wk the apartlT vivacity that
left so- sweat a mark f Ua bright self
Bona her bonny face.
fJUt .man succeeded. Ber . lovely, ; lips
parted; - A rush, as beautiful as tha aheen Y
a wVlta cloud which tha sun suddenly
kUvM to roa. maoated la her cheeks. And
tba man expanded with Joyful pride, and
guu&itfd triumphantly at hi envious fel
lows. XJir how awfully funny!"
. It wna bar voice. But how . curiously
thm end.
fY rjSaANC rVX JUSfl
-rc ETUKMEP FfCOrn MIS )
5J J- OWtct vrsry ILL CALLl
lIXXTTOIq ... fQyv
yes.MraT rill? Xv
1 92r rS:
SAY. I VP just
KHO LOHZt
VAKEKKP UP TO
tmptt rry wirt
Vt. AVCa.
YOU ACS
incite
V-'
a:
. ... feTF 1
:
GlassBeld' - Jif
unlike the . way ah ' looked! .. Tba men
ahiftad uneasily and looked . at - her in
tently. -. - - - ;: -.
"Don't yu think that's funny f ' sh
a&ked.
But nobody seamed to.- The high, strid
ent, curiously - ringing tone had- fairly
knocked tha sens of . humor' senseless In
the crowd. . . .
And how sh talked! And pretty girl
a pretty as sha could have afforded - to
aay nothing with all her energy tn a vole
that did net Jar tha id sal lams of every on
of her bearers till It shook with a palsy.
Not one of the men, would have cared bow
inane sh was If shs had sounded har
moniously. But, even with tha inspiration
of her flashing eyea,. veeled at Intervals
with tha fringe ot bar lashes. It wa Im-poaalbl-
to dream dreams and sea vision
In her neighborhood. Sh scared them
away!
This, then, occurred- to- ma. In was
manicured to a pink shaenUpeea. It took
Learning to Sew and Needles
Lillian was seated neat ta bar mother,
busily plying bar needle to a dainty bit
of linen. "Do yoa think graadm wlU
appreciate thla present T"1' ah -asked her
mother. ;
"I'm suit sure it wlU be bar very best
gift. Sh has been eagerly awaiting tha
Urn when ber' pet could baadle a needle,"
remarked ber mother.
"Aren't needles - curious things 7" asked
Lillian, trying bard to thread the oaa sha
held ta her band. "I wish they could
thread thamaelve. It take so. snuca tiro
to d tt." .
"Have yw ever haard how swedlee are
madeT' aakad mother, toeking at th child.
"No. Do you kaowT Tew just seam to
knew everything."' remarked Litliaa. look,
tag proudly at bar mother. ""Do veu think
1 11 aver be a smart a you 7"
"I'm sur yeu will. ' I read an account
of haw needle wer mad ia a newspaper,
and I cut It out to paste la my acrapeboak.
He K la. I'll read It to you." said mother.
Sh bagaai
"Needle are made from steel wire which
ta first cut eut by shears from colts into
lb length of th need lea to be made. After
a bath f auch bite aa aaav been eut out
they are placed ta a furnace,, then rolled
until perfectly, straight. Nest the needle
pointer take up a dosea or eo of th wlree
aad roll than between hi, thumb and
finger, with their ends on a turatng grind
stone, first oaa aad than tha ether being
ground. The Uttl steal bobbin are neat
fed tat a machine which f attene and
guttor ta head, after which ta eves
are ponehed.
"They are bow complet 1 needles, ' but
rough and easily bant. . Careful heating
and sudden cooling give then th neces
sary temper, aad aotblag' remain but to
give tbeaa their final pedis. On a aaree
cloth aaadles are spy aad to ta a umber f
ABOLrr
Wi1 SEND tMt
tifrrr A Cup
THE f ACT
na -the.
rVD A HANOI t
on rr
Urn to do that! Sh was massaged Ull
sh had that axquieitely aatiny complexion
which which well groomed woman caa en
joy. - That took time and money I 8b 'Was
gowned with auch Individuality,, blest with
the faahloa of th moment. 4hat it wa
patant ah had spent thought and "eash en
her clothes.
It counted up a big amount In dollar
and Urn and trouble, all that excellence
of preparation. And it waa. all made
worthless by a voice that combined tha
queer ringing quality of a stretched string
nit With a piha ' stick and th humtny,
sooning rasp of a prodigiously active buss
saw. Forty- of th dollars sh had spent
with th tailor might have bean diverted
toward a short course ta speech training.
Any sm would have lover hat voiceleea.
But ao man dare acquire auch beauty
with th prospect of a divorce when he
tell hi wlf to "keep still." Sh would
say h told her to "strut up." Nothing
but trouble caa com from such a voice!
a.000 or SO, 0O0. Emery dual Is strewn over
them, oil la sprinkled on and .soft soap
daubed over the cloth, which, rolled tightly.
Is thrown Into a pot with others, wnere tt
rolls about for twelve hours or more.
"When taken from this friction bath tba
needle require only a rinsing In clean hot
water, when they are ready to b sorted
and packed." Philadelphia Inquirer.
There wer three steam . saglne ta us
in th United State la UO-oa at a cop
per mine in Bellevue, . another at a saw
mill hi New Tork, and a small one for
grinding plaator la- Philadelphia.
Galileo the stitoomatt' raw
turna'EJ earth and" meets atviz
' I V M I c L-" I I
; v lie
. V"". J 3. 0-n I
pq
'rr" wki
7 iSSfJSJ
" afswaV VBaBssamaBha.aB. JEL.
awVewxexffss '"a
THE, JUNIOR
This is fheDay
BaSBBaBBBawaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaBBBbBBSBbK -
L i.j&mmZ4mJL sL,.wi- , ........ . a-':- '
EMU. AND JtTJTT NT1AARD.
Xlut Marcy BtreeU
TUESDAY,
Tfamm suad Addrewa.
JJt ABdarMii. 2I1S Map! 8t
Rony Bart, 8oond St. and Poppleton
WlUlam P. Byrne, 310? Burdett St
Edna Bel!, lgn North Twenty-fifth St.
Alfonzo Czaplena. 3930 8onth Twenty
LmHy colvert, 5 031 North Thirty-third St. .
Grae I. Collins. 650 South Twenty-glxth Are
Lola Doney, 3493 Meredith Are
Helen Dahlstrom, 2039 Bancroft St
Albert DeWaal, 3503 Jones St
Marion Elliott, 4835 Poppleton Ave
Irene Gallagher, 3808 Dodge 8t
Harold B. Green, 3439 South Fifteenth St. .. .
James GUllland, 3S3S North Twenty-eighth St
Edna Hume. 2903 Pratt St
Lncll Henderson, 3030 Chicago St
Gertrude Hemmtnghoff, 2513 8outh Twenty-sixth St. German Lutheran. 1903
James Healy, 3344 Manderson St High 1895
Oscar Iversen, 4730 Ames Ave Central Park. . ... 1894
Hans Jensen, Thirty-eighth and Jordon SU Windsor ......... 1903
Frances Krakowaki. 3407 South Twenty-ninth St. . . . Dupont .1905
May KeJley.1005 South Twenty-second St
Dorothy Luis, S3 4 Park At
Helen S. H. Levy, 1030 North Thirty-third St. ..
Ray McCutcheon, 903 South Thirty-fifth Avs. . ... .
Edward J. Mahoney, 1413 So nth Fifth St
Ellen Morris, 913 North Twenty-fifth 8t
Julius Nygaard, 8103 Marcy St
Emil Nygaard, 3103 Marcy St
William Newwlrth, 410 Poppleton At
Harry Paulsen. 1440 Westsrfleld At
Meta Priggie, 3005 South Nineteenth St
ElUabeth Radloff. 1313 Corby St
Jnn P. Rauford. 3114 Maple St
Viola H. Rheam, 3603 Fowler Avs
Melba F. Stenner, 3311 South Thirty-first St. .-. .
Benjamin Schmidt. 403 William St .........
Minnie) SkUenger, 514 Woolworth At ...i
Delia Templet n. II The Strehlow
Hiram West. 8310 South Forty-second
Charles J. Whitaker. 1808 Spencer St.
Louis Wad. 134 North, Twenty-fourth
The Way of
If th privilega of placing ban were al
lowed to bust nee wonsaa, how many would
Joyfully hand eut th Uttl signal of dis
approval to thd customer wbe Insists upon
tailing bar entire family history before
soaking known bar wishes regarding a pur
shas. Bow many valuable momenta are
wasted listening to th story of social con
quest aad th latest pure has ta feminine
frlpperiea? Ia business time Is money. The
customer baa a mora right to take up the
time of employer and employ with idle
chatter and prsaalttla than sh has to
put ber hand Into th money till and ex
tract aom of its contents.
Recently on of th tdl- feminln hop
pers whose chief task In bf la obliterat
ing time, dropped la who the manager et
a fashionable dressmaking establishment
was engaged with th repreeantatrv of an
zcluslT French firm. Every minute was
valuable, but th manager was com polled
to give th customer her attention. The
idler iaUurvfy seated herself, th manager
standing at attention.
This I th eoavwraalioa which followed:
Customer I'm sorry to be late for say
appointment, but I mat some friends at
luncheon and I simply forgot th hour.
Iiav all th attendants gone T
Manager Te. they tear at t o'clock,
you know.
Customer Goodness ! That put me eut
awfully. What ttm may I com tomorrow T
Manager Ton . may com at half -past
three ta th aftoraoea.
Customer- Come to think -about it, I
can't com tomorrow. I'm going motoring
with th Smith -Jon (you- knew Mr.
Smith-Jones, th steel magnate); they
hav wonderful machlnea. And I can't,
com th next day, because I am going
to my Jeweler's, on th thr side of town.
They are making n a aew ring from a
brooch, on of thoe antique things, an
heirloom ta my husband's family.
Then followed a detailed account of how
the Jewelers bad made tha ring too small
how a favorite son had run away and mar
ried a girl beneath him socially, a contem
plated fortnight ia th country, and other
family data. Tha stream of conversational
nothings was punctuated by a polite "yea"
and "no" at intervals from tha manager,
who could not afford to give a more pointed
suggestion.
i When th effusion was finished . it had
occupied Just a half hour by th clock,
H They Should "Come Back"
j1 to MM
Tb7 dkcn "stats" and
rxiiss? haYenly .bodies-
BIRTHriAV ROOK
We Celebrate
Ave.
June 13, 191L
School. ,
. . I.othrop .'. , ,
. . Train
..Lake
Year.
.,1899
. .1900
. .1901
..1905
..1900
Lour
- alxth 6t Im. Concpt!on.
Monmouth Park.
Farnam .......
Monmouth Park.
Casrellar .......
19
1S94
190J
,.1904
. .1895
High
Beals ........ .. .1897
Farnam .,...,....1901
Edw. Rosewater. ..1903
Lothrop 1903
High ..1893
Farnam .. . .'. . , . .1899
. . Mason ; .
..High ......
i Franklin ......
. . Columbian- .
.. St. Patrick....
. . Kellom .......
. . . Columbian . . . .
. . . Columbian
'..1899
. .1895
..1899
..1894
. .1898
..1900
.,.1891
...1897
...Train 1897
...Edw. Rosewater. ..1905
.. . Vinton 1905
. . .Lake . ..1901
. . . Howard Kennedy -1903
. . . Saratoga . . . . . . .1904
... Windsor . 1903
...Train 1898
...Train ...-... 1801 -...High
........... 189 t
...Beala ...........189
. 8acred Heart... . .1901 '
St
....... .
St. ...... .V. High
188t.'
. . . ..,'.....- . V
Some Women". - v - 'j
and the manager waa compelled to hurry '
ever her purchase in haphazard fashion,
picking random. And It all might hav '
been said in a few atmpl warda: "I waa
unabl to keep my appointment. Tell me
wbea I may call later in th week."
r
Just as Easj
J
Two drummers, while la a train, got Into
aa argument over th actloa of th air
brake.
"Its the inflatloBY ef the tube that step
the train," declared'' the Erst.
"Wrong, wrong!" shouted th second. .
"It's tbs output of the exhaustion."
Bo they wrangled for aa hour. " '
Thea when tha train arrived at the
itaUoa. they agreed to submit the matter
.'or settlement to the engineer. That gen-,
tleman. leaning condescendingly, from the
door of his engine, listened with an at
tentive frown to tha two travelers state
ment of their argument. Tlren b smiled,
shook his head and said: '-
"Well, gents, ya'r both wrong about
th workin' of th air brake. Tet It's
very slmpl aad easy to understand. When
we want to stop tha train We Just turn this
'ere tap, aad then ws Oil the pipe with
vacuum!" '
What Ha Boca as e Of
Th o. f. livery stable whose star
boarder waa a goaif ' 1
The e. t man who used to blow out the
gaslight? -The
o. f. Jokesinith who used to explain
his puns In parenthesis? ; '
4 Th o. t man who used to turn his back
when h took out hi money J
Th . f. woman who uaed to pound th
steak with a botato- masher? " -
Th Carefal Ceaalaeto. "
young woman tried to be aristocratic,
and did not look at tha money, that sh
gave to the street car conductor, but b
meekly gave her back th osengs, a
which waa written: "1 H never cease to
lov thee, and said 'that he wa aa or- '
phaa with n llttl brothers, to support
and mint b excused. -- '
A Franca patent covers a precees for
bleaching and drying 'seaweeds so - they
may be used for packing purpoeaa.
And the astronomer (JiiCOY.
cr another "stax."