THE COURIER. common at that period for people to re- through the books. She makes miser gard pthisia as romantic, and any mental able little pathetic testa of her sanity, derangement aa disgraceful. Certainly and can find nothing wrong but that one Mrs. S. took the latter view. She was thing that she feels that at aoy time rejoiced to Hnd the child restored to her- she may lose her personality, that Janet self, and she bound Miss X. to say may come back. She feels it a disgrace nothing about tho incident to anybody, that she is not like other people; she "iat nvinia ohnnM hrinrr if nn n train at lontrs for helD and svmDatbv. yet not for V tWU.V HUVM. ....wte .. ... m . ,- - . - . , . THE SHIRT WAIST MAN. her afterwards." She considered that Norah had been too much in theeun and that had "made her Billy" for a time: Considering that the disappearance of the symptoms meict the disappearance of the disease, she did not call in a doc tor. It is probable, too, that she had a feeling that eren now is not uncommon among people of defective education, that mind and morals do not concern the physical. Norah apparently completely regained .her health. She did not become an in fant prodigy. At the age of fourteen, when Miss X. left her and she was placed in the hands of foreign govern esses, she seems to have been a fairly normal girl; a little emotional, perhaps, but with no tendencies to melancholy, fond of sport, eager to see the world. - Eieht years afterwards Miss X. took worlds would she speak of her trouble to a single soul. She appears to have some means, never indicated, of communicating with this mysterious twin sister. She speaks of telling her things, and of exacting a promise from her that she will never come back except 'when Norah is alono at night. Then we hear no more of these conversations, which are reported in a most matter-of-fact way, and an other horror springs up. Janet means to ruin her. She will never speak, but Norah knows. After that there come3 a period of about a year, during which there are no notes at all. This period coincides with her residence in London, and includes the few months of her engagement. In deed, it may be doubted if Norah ever wrote in the book again, for the next the poet of companion to Norah. Dur- entry, which is the laBt, is written in the ing the interval she had once more be- looking-glass hand. I held it to a mir come an orphan, and she had inherited ror and read: Mr. S.'s fortune, which was not immense, but was much greater than it had been supposed he would leave behind him. It gave Norah an income of about 1.700 a year. She came to London, where she had many -friends. Some of these were'anxious to have her to live with them, but she was fond of her independ ence. She wrote to Mi6s X., with whom she had kept up a desultory correspond once, and an arrangement was eoou made between them. They lived to gether in a comfortable house in Hamp stead. Here, also, Miss X. noticed nothing that could be called abnormal about Norah. She was bright and en ergeticfond of pleasure, and fond of getting new experiences. Norah was at this time engaged to be married to a distinguished Orientalist and traveler, a man about ten years older than herself, to whom she was devoted. It was arranged that after the marriage Mia X. was to act as her housekeeper. Three days before the marriage was to take place Norah committed suicide, poisoning herself with oxalic acid. It is not a goodsuicide'B poison, because the antidote is to be found ready to hand in most houses. But Norah was not discovered; she took the poison in a di luted form and died in her sleep. No motive of any kind could be found for the act, at the time, and the usual verdict wes returned. II. By her will she left to Miss X. an annuity and all her bookB and papers. 'I have come back for a little while,' But tomorrow I shall come back to stay. -I shall take him away from you, Bister Norah. It is 1 that he shall marry. I wonder what you thought. For a long" time. . . ." There the sentence breaks off abrupt ly. It bears the date of the day on which Norah committed suicide. As a case of double personality it is explicable, doubtless, on the theory of absolute somnambulism, but it suggests other questions less easy to answer. A clever novelist might be able to make Bomethiug of it, filling in the lacuna;. 0 course, he would be using a motive that had been used the motives have Barry Pain, in Black and White. before: but then all Been "used '"before. "What sort of a dog was it that bit you?" asked Sprocketts of Bevelgear. "A chainless." Do you get your Courier regularly? Please compare address. If incorrect, please send right address to Courier office. Do this this week. "Tears of blood are not to passed by all of ue," answered man. Tlie Mirror. Among the latter was a bundle of penny " one woui(j think exercise books tied up with a string, and marked "Not to be read until a year after my death." Rightly or wrongly, Miss X. made no mention of these at the inquest. It is from them that the brief second part of Norah's history is here written. I have not, been nermitted to rtkaA fhft whrklft rf tViAAA hvttra aa raf IU6 Much of what I have read I am not per mitted to repeat here, and of verbatim quotation I can give very little. These books are a revelation of the tragedy of Norah's life. They are con cerned, principally, with her second per sonality, Janet, and are not consecutive, long lapses occurring between the dates of the different books: There is no reference to the Lowestoft incident in (hem. The first book is dated when Norah was fifteen years old- The tint line begins: "I was Janet in sleep latt night. It is no good to pray any more. One day she will come when I am awake, and everybody will know, and they will shut me up eomewhere.and say that I am mad." That note of horror is repeated all Defect. A wise man looked at the world and laughed. And an altruist offered him reproof, saying: "There is occasion for tears, Behold me, Gutless and cool ; I am the shirt waist man And if I don't Take the rag off the-fnish I take the coat j Off my back And fling it In the face of conventionality. What do I care If Fashion Piles the perspiration Up knee deep On the backs Of coated men? It doesn't monkey with me , For I yank off my coat And Fashion Chases itself out of my Neighborhood, And leaves me Cool As a cucumber. Of course , My shirt waist Isn't cut according To' the pattern ' " Of the lady shirt waist And it lacks Fluff and puff " And furbelow And has a Superfluity of narrative Perhaps , But it gets there Just the same, And I am comfortable While those, Coated with conventionality , Sweat and swear And kick holes In the Weather Bureau And lose their tempers In an overflow of temperature . The shirt waist nun Isn't a recognized institution Just yet, But he's the coming man ' And the hot weather Brings him out As it does the tassels On a field of corn, And soon the streets Will blossom with him , Not altogether A thing of beauty , But verily a joy During the heated term . That's me, The shirt waist man , And as long As I keep cool Conventionality M ay go to thunder . W.J. L. The Sun. To clubs of ten taking The Courier the annual subscription price is seventy five cents (75 cents). Regular subscription price one dollar per year ' be com the wise The Rock Island playing cards are slickest you ever handled. One pack will be sent by mail on receipt of 15 cents in stamps. A money order or draft for 50 cents or same in stamps will secure 4 packs. They will be sent by express, charges prepaid. Address, John Sebastian, G. P. A., Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R'y, Chicago. Do you get your Courier regularly ? Please compare address. If incorrect, please send right addrees to Courier office. Do this this week. Tie COURIER And any One Dollar Woman's dub Magazine 51.511 The Wholesale Trade in College Degrees. (From the Saturday Eenlng Post.) Even in the good old days when a man was knighted simply because the king esteemed him a good fellow, and a wo man became my lady in exchange for a judiciously bestowed kiss, patents of no bility were granted for better reasons than are parchments of learning today at least by some of the smaller colleges. If honors were easy then, honorary de grees are easier now. No one with more than a million seams to be ineligible. So long as we have college presidents whose sense of humor and of the eternal fitness of things are as small as their greed of endowment and advertising is large, this indiscriminate scattering of honors will go on. Doctors are already as plentiful as colonels in an ex-Confederate stronghold. We have professors of the beautiful science of shoe polish ing. It ia but a step now to doctors of the delicate art of shaving. As for the men who are by attainment entitled to an LL. D., thoy are already beginning to fight shy of the honor. It is sometimes a distinction to be plain Mr. Smith. OUT SAW of the Lincoln. Hard vwor Co.'s entire stock of BICYCLES IND BlfitfCLE SIJNIfS AT GUARANTEED HAIsF THE REGULAR PRICES. The wise and prudent buyer will take advantage of this wondtrful opportunity, as it will be by far the most startling bargain Bale of Bi cycles and Sundries ever announced in America. It is a well know fact that the Lincoln Hardware Com- pany were among the largest west ern wholesalers in the bicycle busi ness, and carried a complete supply, which was second only to our mam moth stock, and owing to the rapidly increasing business in otaer lines, they decided to close out their en tire bicycle busines to us at a great sacrifice. We will positively not mix one item of this stock with our own, but will distribute the entire Lincoln Hardware Company's stock among the Lincoln people, guar anteeing to cat their regular prices on every item at least 50 PER CEflT and in many cases a great deal more. All good things arc bound to be imitated, but 7 and in this instance we will positive ly guarantee the lowest prices, sell ing for less than any other dealer can buy the same, goods for in wholesale lots. Jlfflmim DISSUADED UNOOLN 1NSEB. 1136 O St. Phone 1812. The Bicycle and Phonograph Head quarters oi tne entire west. 0 Cycle Photographs J Athletic Photographs m Photographs of Babies 0 Photographs of Groups 9 . Exterior Views 9 THE PHOTOGRAPHER J 129 South Eleventh Street. 2 Tl WEIT CMt Mut may be secured by oar aid. Addreaa, J THE PATENT RECMt, fiuUcrlptlOBi to.Tbt Patent Secord ILOOperaanufiu n x j i i K i I t- r 1 1