Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Wallowa chieftain. (Joseph, Union County, Or.) 1884-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1902)
! ; 1 ! I I "It's nothing. I'm not scrap traeom- .Y"M.ty. fortable. It strike me at brine sort ! of a lark h'tn a joke. I mean. I feel a jolly as a sand-oy. and." with a ten- 1 der. earnest glance, "far jollier, because ' i I can now see ynu. "Bui how is is to last?" says she, i nervously, -it rac't i" on like this for ever, and Sai"ti cnmes down bere soaie- i times, and he knr v you." "I dare -y I shall mannire to avoid him. Tiioivi I have often thought late ly that it would W a P'nkI thing to take Dm into our cijti'l.-n-e." "t h. n". r.o. i:o indee,;." cries she: "he ni;s.'Lt It'll h. fi.tlier. ar.d then a' would THE BROOKLYN LOOP V4S NOT A MARKER FOR THIS. f 3 HE much d:'tised loop of the II Hrooklrt: at the hartl.1 of Sant.a shown bv the losses ish frigate. The RAM'8 HORN BLASTS. on board the Brit- j 425? H n" e were killed, and A LZf Uto t of crew of 4. 's ha!Ti:i: x:: r. I - W ' i tit :t r.. t: low Vera of VeT:.'s. ::. it. and I ? tn-.r-. rT.v; -'r.:t- or ..tii-: a t-arj -.j:.. " v..'l; -.-nj' I'lid." v T era. f-ruu-r.--e at sijut "He ni frn. :--:7vd tii . 1 ' - f -. l vra. bum'-n: :a:e' d E..iC..;r otr." s..vs -1 tl.,v no v-ry n u -i. -r.u-. "S - ir i. "t . .1 . . 'T "It j. L who L-e:ryt-d I'ou art- a:r.-o ii.ii"' p..i:at. ye. I ui'iie 1 sna':d sr. a-.;ory." s;.y l-iiy. witt a sw.ft '..:n .-- it his f-tner. at. I t- t:r.-d wh'-i: " v.. iv l'r-::k r:e S-;-.i.'n. addreii;j: hi wit:. suddt'L 'U. "wty did "ik t" tier of tii: Why have lu-erateiy lcu'.ted your brother' "We!;, ta ! very it. i-o. If 1 leu et ; a way. and try t if Vou i-ali." They h.-.ve l.;.rt-':y forv the ffai:ut t..-ur tS'l-rvaciiLS throun ' n.y oii-i.:;turei V.ete 10 . "I.. ;.:id b. itr. Gra-ie she's wo. and riever. :! her a!'.. :ie wonld twevn th lit th-y L.A.: Tiiere' a ste;i! 0 e Uir to-niorrow time sej urste be e of t;ruti h U -a the laur:. W .; tit-..! II'I wounoeu ou eh:,s profiled bv sails in the days and wotinded-nnio n? me - F .VWf .ru,r to steam n,v pttion. The draw.,:, Commoi ,re J t;uic If. Fiven herewith is copied by the Toledo ; tw-oe aura.s JYA Wade from the Unite,! Stares Military ' ...:. Lnt Ikf.v kopt at his post .m I KVW lM..-a i-ri- ! tl" ""y :ls w"n' VH.l V V V W. tSt S D't rfuliy. f.ir;.-tfui aii I have neard fr. IE .iE wht: would te think I should put .on of his if 1 were you a a sort of a i ciSoult t" Lag'.e. 1 fa.tt ir. tiiat deviarst yju." "C't. he said more than that." cries Gr-.selda. "Why, it afj-ears that Tom Mr. Peyton knows S-aton quite we!!, and likes him. too. Mr. Peyton says that he. S-ator.. U engajed to be married to a Miss iiutler. a friend of Lady lliv erdaie s." For a moment there is a dead siien". durinc which the pretty crimson on Verb's cheek dies out. leaving her singu larly paie. No doubt the surprise is -eat- "Is that true?" she says. "I should not be surpri-ed. though I oonJe I am: it is only what I might have exi-evt-d from my first judirment of hiai. And one should not condemn him, either; it is not his fault that he calls Unci. Gregory father." A f'jotstep upon the frave! outside mak them both tuns their heads. "What is it. Gninch?" Vera eaimiy a-ks as the housekeejr appears on the threshold. "The master wishes to see you. Miss Pysart, in the library." There is an ex pression of malignant amusement in the woman's eyes as she says this. Vera had pone into the library with a paie face, but it was with one paler still she came out of it half an hour lnt-r. white as death, and with a strained look of passion on every feature not to be sub dued. She might perhaps have given way to the blessed relief of tears if she had had time to ecaie Griselda: but as she finds herself looking at aton I'ysart. who has at this moment entered the in ner hali leading to the room she has just left, nil her being seems to stiffen into a coid horror of contempt. She stops short and files her heavy eyes oc his. "?o you betrayed me!" she ssys, in a low tone that vibrates with scorn. "Betrayed you?" ecmes he. starting. There i that in her face not to b mis taken, and a presentiment of coming evil seiids a hot flush to his brow. "You are a lad actor." snys she. with a palesmiie; "you change color, at a crisis; you have still a last grain of hoc ety left in you. You should see to t.'ia"; kill it quickiy. it tpoxla your otherwise p-rfect role." "You are pleased to be enigmatictii." ays he, with a frown. "I am. however, at a ioss to know what you mean." "Oh. are you ashan.i-0 to keep it up tne ce'.'eptioE? cnes sue with a sud den outbreak of wrath, you do it ?" yo;l L tii.C. . "Tnere was nr :nult. I may have told her that if ae cbe to do such things n society disapproves of, she must on!y submit to the consequence and consider herself ostracised." " 'Compromised.' you said." "Weli. it is as good a word; yon are welcome to it." "Psaaw!" says Seaton. with a quick motion of the hand, as if Singing the idea far from him. "let us have no more of such petty scandal. You forget," stemiy. "that when you seek to compro mise Vera, you condemn me. your son." I'yart shrugged h shoulders. "The man is never in fault; so your world rules." says be. lightly. "You persist, then, in your insult," . says Seaton. going a step nearer to him. j the veins swelling in his forehead. "You j still say that sht " "I say that, and more." replied the old man. undaunted, a very demon of ob stinacy having now taken possession of hi? breast. "I feel even boid enough to suggest to her the advisability of an im mediate marriage with you. as a means of crushing in the bud the scandal that is sure to arise out of her imprudence." i "Go. Vera: leave the room," says Sea ton, with great emotion. "Why should she go? It seems to me ' you give her bad advice." says Mr. I'y CHAPTEI. XIV. To-day i wet : a soaking, steady d.-wa-p-.ir ttat commenced at early dawn is ren'.i--ir;g taiserii hie the shrubbery and gardi era, depressed by the melancholy of the dy, has east her book a-iiie. and. with a certainty of uieet.t.g nobody in the empty room and corridors, wanders aimies?.y throughout their dreary length and breadth. These rooms are well known to her, and presently wearying of them sne turns asiue and rather timidlv I pushes open a huge, faded, l.aize-covered door that leads she scarcely knows wnith- , er. She pushes it back and looks eagerly j inward. j It is not an apartment, after all. A j long. low. vaulted passage reveals itself, l oniy dimly lighted by a painted window j at the lower end. It appears to be a -e,v i.v i - u . l , iv .1 ... g, uir- where: but presently, as she runs her eyes along the eastern wall, a door meets them, an old oaken door, iron-eiasped and literally hung with cobwebs. Curiosity grows strong within her. Catching the ancient handle of tnis door, a mere brass ring sunk in the woodwork, she pushes against it with all her might. In vain. But not deterred, she pu-hes again and again: and at the last trial of her strength a sharr sound a ring of something brazen falling on a stone floor j crashes with a quick, altogether as ' touuding noise upon the tomblike silence j that nils the mysterious pastage. At the same moment the door gives ; way. and she, unexpectedly yielding with : it. steps hurriedly forward into a dark j and grewsome hole. The poverty of the light has perhaps j dimmed her sight, because after a little I while a shadow on the opposite w-aii, that resolves itself into an opening, be comes known to her. It is not a door. Magazine, for Noveu.ler. tOical published or a few years H Philadelphia. Mr. lieorge A. Chase. '. Toled.i. L.?s the tmuud volume 'or lM-p. sud ls-4' w b'cb be kindly loaned fot the purjioses of this article The diagram is of the action between the 1" lilted States frigate Cou:i:u:ioii. Commodore I'.alnliridge. and the Br.t ish frigate Java. dipt. LatJilwrt. This fierce sea tight occurred on Wethiesday. IeveUiber so. W::, in the Atlantic, off the coast of Brazil. The wind was from the notheast. and the arrow in the diagram shows lis direction as lo ' the vessels. The action began a: -:10 p. in. The position of the two frigates was broadside ou. as repre sented in the lewer left-hand corner of J the diagram. The course of each ves- i sol is sbowu. and tiieir relative posi toms et the various critical ioiuis of the engagement, until the surrender of the Java, at S -o p. m., when their po sitions were as piven at the right-hand top of the diigram. Uf course, in the various evolutions, the wlDd was the du'v motive power. This being the case, the efforts of the aid-time fighters w ere largely directed to destroying the masts and sails of ;he enemy s vessel which. If the effort were successful, put her at the mercy of the other and to getting Into such a position that all of .the guns on one side could bj trained on the enemy's deck from one end. thus raking it from stem to stem with a bail of missiles, and disabling more men at one broad side than could be done in any other way. The diagram shows that Balu bridge was the lietter sailor, for he maneuvered the Constitution into such a position with regard to the Java no less than ve times during the fight. j n hile the British did not secure that advantage even once over the Yankee : ship. ! The destructive effect of this raking fire on th Java's decks U clearly ::' the victory s The effect of the American Mre ui-on . he r gglng of the Java was no less re- j miir-aMe Whe-. the British com-j n.a:i.KT strti k his f.ag. his vessel bad , lo t a Mt.-le sp.tr standing, and filiated. ' i t. ui.m.iM-.gv.Me wreik. i:hh the sea.' The F.rltl-h lire .liiir.sged the Coiwtitu- ( tior.'s sr.:is very ti.uch. but fortunately j none of her p'ar was cut. The pris- j oners and their personal effects were removed to the Constitution and the i Java wa bk wn up. with 8 san. looking from one to the' other with I rata'r 8 heavy henien curtain, and now a satirically friendly glance. "Let her rather stay and discuss with us your marriage with her." If he had been so foolishly blind as to hope by this bold move to force Vera into an engagement, his expectations are now on the instant destroyed bv hi son. "Understand me. once for all. that I shal! ! l7au,-'4'i not marry Vera." says he. white with anger, and some strong feeiing that he is almost powerless to suppress. "Were she to come to me this moment and lay hr hand in mine, and say she was will ing so fa; to sacrihee herself, I sh fuse to listen to her." Vera, for the first time siu'-e her en trance, lifts her head to iook at him. Was he thinking of Miss Butier? Was he true at last to her? A Ir.tie bitter suiiie curls her lip. "I thank you." she says, with a slight inclination of her head toward her cousin, and with a swift step leaves the room. chaptei: xiii. Four long days haie crept languidly into the past, four of the dullest davs Gr;?ida I'ysart has ever yet endured, as she is compelled to acknowledge even to uei-set.. j?m..w iv, wita ainiies steps, sue I riM-s and flings aside the moiiiv volume she bad found in one of the rooms below, and which she has been making a fruit less effort to read, and looks out unon "Oh, how could t-je auniess pleasure-ground beneath her window, hne becomes suddenly aware "Great heaven! how can I convince you "," aD un-amniar figure that, kneeling on that I have done nothing?" exclaims he. R" before one of the beds, seems growing pale as her-elf. 10 be weeding away for its dear life. "There was no one else awake, there was no one to see me." says she. trying to stiuV h-r agitation. "What. th-r.. mut I think but mat you were the one to i-ll your father of that unlucky night when I was locked out in the garden?" "He has h-ard that?" Seaton. as if thunderstruck, looks blankly at her. "Why do you compel me to tell you what you already know?" says she. with a little irrepressible stamp of her foot. "If you will listen to what is already no news to you, learn that your father sent for me just now a long time ago, hours ago. I think." putting her hand to her head in a little, confused, miserable way. "and accused me of having spent the whole night alone with you, purposely, in the garuen. 1 It is certainly toe new gardener. Poor j creature, whoever he is. what could haTe induced him to come here? Uncle Greg ory had evidently found no difljculty in replacing his former employe. Had be secured this new gardener on the old por terms? Unhappy creature! poverty iudeed must have been his guest before he and his clothes came tu such a sorry pass! At this moment the "unhappy ; creature" lifts bis head, turns it deliber ately toward her, and she finds herself I face to face with Tom Peyton! A little sharp cry breaks from her; ibe ' stifles it. but turns very paie. I "You! you!" she says. ' "Don't look like that!" he sayg, in a low tone, but sharply. ' "Would yon be j tray me? Kemember, it was my only reuiute!y determined to go through with her adventure, she advances toward it, pulls it aside, and finds herself face to face with Gregory I'ysart! He is on his knees, next that peculiar caldnet described in an earlier chapter, and as he lifts his bead upon her en- a murderous giare. as of one hunted, desperate, comes into his cvrious eyes. The side of the cabinet is lying wide open, and, as he involuntarily moves, the chink of golden coins falling one upon uid re- i another alone breaxs the loud silence that j oppresses the atmosphere. In his hand I ne is noiumg an oid auu yel.ow parch ; mellt. "1 I am sorry." murmurs Vera, terri- 1 bed; "I did not know; I " j "What brought you here, girl here where I Lelieved myself safe? Go. go ! ttiere is nothing nothing. I tell you , they lied to you if tney told you any j thing go, 1 say!" He has entirely lost his elf-possession, ; and is still kneeling on the floor, now hugging, now trying to hide beneath him the paper he holds with his sinewy, ner vous fingers. "Go. go. go!" he shrieks, beside himself. He is in a perfect fren iy; all dignity is gone; to the girl stand ing trembling there it is a loathsome sight to see this old man on the brink of the grave thus crouching, abased, dishon ored. "I am going." she says, faintly. She is ghastiy paie; the sight of him in his horrible fright, cringing thus upon the ground, has so unnerved her that she ac tually grasps at the curtain for support. (To be continued. I 99 : I: : 2 - ft: s ' r i i Ml 1 fr1 i lb I . s W m Wiralaa Note Calliac th ' Bcpentanc. i tu worth aklng maDj uiase oat rnena, niisa tWj tuanna lit mg ror to-i row's. It is not burdens sore baet ninue lrfe 1 D U: 1 the Christian soldier is tlii- doesn't seem to care which aid ttchts on. Wlieu ('Sod I'as a purpose Ills pu; always the best oue. An nuadulterated Bible would fc, an uudlviiled church. ! Wc could not tH-ar pleasure bat .the preparation of pain. , Sorrow is t lie silken cord that the circuit of sympathy. j Bigotry kills trutn and seeU 1 frighten folk with her effigy. i The old man may have a greater Iture before him than the youth, i Wc do not gain glory In heard i making religion ridiculous on earul j Sometimes a man finds that the j ,he expected to et catches bits hid 1 neck. God dashes pain into our pteutf that we may be willing to leaven for His joys. Many of the Jewels In the diidul friendship are after all very smilj very precious. It Is useless for our soldiers to ! our foes abroad while our saloon j ter them at home. WlND.rs.E. TIME - Z O'CLOCK- DIAGRAM OF BATTLE OF CONSTITUTION' AND JAVA. SHIELD FOR WOUNDS. ado you ininK mat i i "I don't think." with a condemnatorr 1 1 mean, or do anything like that.' glance. "As I told you before. I know, j how could you do aucb a thing?" Your father has insolently accused me M-Ts ae- in a trembling voice. "And of an impossible thing; but even if I had ! aud now stranse you look, and what stayed in the garden with you that night, j dreadful clothes you have on!" of my own free will, I cannot see where I "Well, I gave a good deal for them." would lie the disgrace he connects w ith ' sa-TS De casting an eloquent glance at his it." trousers: "more four times more than "You are right, no one could see dis- ! 1 eTer aTe for a suit- I m sorry you grace where you were," says Seaton, I don't PP"Te of them; but for myself. 1 calmly. "My father is an old man, he" j ,ink tb'"m becoming, and positively "Is old enough to know how to insult j e'o:7 in th-: I would rather have thein a woman." coldly, "when." with a terri- i ,haD nf clothes I've ever yet had. and ble glance at him. "shown the way. Oh," i 1 amlL tn,"m "Sht down cheap. It's laying her hand upon her breast in a j ratQ?r m11 if y don't think they suit paroxysm of grief, "it was abominable of j m-v 8t7le at beauty." you. and you said twice you said it," IIe is disgracefully nnalive to the hor eo ruing closr to him, and lifting accus- I ?r,r of bis position. He is even elated by ing eyes to his, " Trust me," I renieniber j and piainiy on the point of bubbling it as though you uttered it but now. and lywith laughter. Given an oppurtu I believed you. Trust me,' you said." j Dity indeed, and it is certain he will give "I should say it again." says Dysart, j Birth away; Gnselda, however, declines "a hundred times again. Come." he says, j t0 belp him to this opportunity. and leads her back again to the library 11 horrid of you I don't know how he has just quitted. Gregory Dysart still sits in bis usual chair, his arms on the elbows of it, his face is set, as though death bad laid its seal on it, save for the marvelously, horribly youthful eyes, so full of fire and life. "Yon will be so good as to explain to Vera at once," begins Seaton, in a dan gerous tone, "how it was you learned of her being in the garden the other night." "What night? She may have been out every night, for aught I know; she tells me she hi fond of moonlight," replies the old man, impassively. "You understand perfectly the night of you can laugh," says she. beginning to cry. "I can't bear to see you dressed like that, just like a common man." "Well I think yoo're a little unkind." soys he, regarding her reproachfully. "I did think you would be glad to see me. I thought. I fancied I suppose I was wrong that when we parted on that last day you were sorry that yoo would lit to see me again." "Well, that was all true," says Gri selda, sobbingly. Then what are you crying a bo at?" "I am nnhappy that becanse of me yon must be made so uncomfortable." "If that's all," says he, beaming afresh. Invention Which Will Likewise Pro tect Boils and Carbuncles. The purpose of the Invention shown In the Illustration is to provide a shield for attachment to a surgical splint or to be used in connection with plaster of paris or other form of bandage for the treatment and protection of wounds, nnd also for the care of boils, carbun cles and the like. In the case of a se vere flesh wound it is not desirable to re move the splints at each treatment and it is the office of this shield to facilitate access to the wound direct With Its Mutually but prised. There must have been aliout four hundred people at Lake Bennett writes Mr. Secretan, in bis entertaining book, "To Kloudyke and Back." making four hundred different varieties of death dealing conveyances, for each had to construct his own boat for descending to the Yukon Biver. The owner of a little wheezy, portable sawmill, which was puffing away day and uight tear ing spruce logs to pieces for one hun dred dollars a thousand feet was get ting rich. Anything that would float was at a premium. Once in a while you would see something resembling a boat but not often. As a general rule, the soap box and coffin combination was the most popular pattern. Some men could not wait to be sun plied by the wheezy sawmill, but went in for whipsawing on their own ac count One man stands on top of the log. and the other below, and the saw is then pushed up and down along a chaik mark. A story Is told of two "pardners" who commenced whipsawing. After working a while, till his tired muscle almost refused duty, the lower one ex cused himself for a moment and hav ing hired the first man he met to take his place in the pit disappeared. The sawing proceeded until the uppermost "pardner," all unconscious that be was working with an entire stranger, be thought him of a device to rest Mak ing some ordinary explanation, be got down from the lug and quickly hired an Indian to take bis place at the saw. The "pardners" were mutually sur prised to meet each other shortly after ward In an adjacent saloon. , PBOTECTOB FOB BOILS A.M CABBC5CLES. i aid it Is possible to prevent contact of ! the sore part with anything liable to Injure or bruise It in any manner, and j there is no danger of dislocating a i small plaster or cloth laid over the i wound. The cut shows the device at j tacbed to the arm to protect a boil, j with straps to bind it on the arm. The i protecting cover is thrown back to ex ; pose the Interior for treatment A latch 1 Is provided to hold the cover in a closed position after treatment In case of body wounds the straps may be re placed by strips of adhesive plaster, ; which are laced through the eyelets and fastened to the skin. Edward I Shears, of Lakota. N. D is the in ventor. A Certain Wv. "How can you tell mushrooms from toadstools. little boy?" "Eacy! If de amy dat eats 'em la alive next day deya mushrooms. If he's shifted off de mortal coll des Uey toadstool." SHE TOUCHED A CHINAMAN. I Bad Instead of the Expected Good Lock iceanlted trom the Encounter. It Is a very common superstition that to mb the hump of a cripple's back is sure to bring good luck, in some parts of the country women believe good for tune may be assured by touching a Chinaman while passing him 'on the street, and the women of New Orleans seem to have gone daft on the subject Of course they endeavor to create the impression that they do It playfully, but they never neglect an opportunity to touch an oriental as they pass him. A young girl at one of the railroad sta tions a few evenings ago figured in a rather embarrassing incident on ac count of her ambition and her effort tc touch a Chinaman. The oriental had drifted into the station and was eve dently bent on an out-of-town trip, and he was going at a rather rapid rate, probably fearing that he would miss his train. As soon as the girl spied him she junied up and made a quick dart, evidently for the purjiose of crossing the Chinaman's path at a certain point and just brushing him as he passed Here is probably where she made a mistake. At any rate either the girl or the Chinaman erred. Both were walk ing rapidly and each seemed to be In different to the course of the other She touched the Chinaman all right and ii the good luck Incident to the act ot touching is measured by the vigor and for..- of the touch good fonune ought to shower on her whole familv It was a fierce collision. The girl was embar rassed, and from the capers cut by the Chinaman he evidently thought a freight train bad struck him. Yes in deed, this business of touching a China man is a regular fad now. and if you m a girl rushing wildly and aimless 7 down the street watch her and see if she doesn't brush the clothes of a Mongolian gently in passing. FOOD POISONING. I'tomains, Caused by Decom Are a Frequent Canae, Newspuiiers record, now and tin stances of the poisoning of i nuuilter of people who have been together at a picnic, weddlnj li church festival, or the like. Tbei; turns are often very alarming. w soluble those caused by some poison, so that not uncornmonlj Is at first a suspicion of lntci: poisoning of the food wltb strychnine, or other powerful Ant some evil-minded person. Sometimes, if coper vessel! been used in the preparation of food, suspicion is tcrued In that tiou. But copjier vessels are Is ingly common use, while tn which poisoning has been demoita to have resulted from them in rare. Indeed, it might almost bt that the employment of clean vessels in cooking is devoid of When u careful chemical eiamii of the food causing this wboleut soiling has liecu mude, there bat always been found the preseni'i or mure of the poisons called p;i produced by the Incipient dee sition of aniiiial matter. Tbesc stances may be present in pol' amount even when there is nor to taste or smell that the h tainted The symptoms of ptouiain poi vary, according to the kind of food that lias been eaten, and t- Keiuble those caused by a dai dose of arsenic, belladonna. tr: inorpuine. or other mineral or ble poison. A frequent form of polsonlt from cheese or Ice cream undergone a chemical change tains a ptouiain called tjr Here we find vomiting aoC weak and irregular pulse, fra'l uuduu, uiueuese ui lue lijra w1"- and dizziness. Fnrtnnnrwlv. dftf dom occtirs in such cases, tnocfi soiling from tainted sbeU-fitn. canned meats or fish is not infrw ly fatal, The treatment consists In beip4 system to get rid of the offendiS terlal by not checking the vomlO diarrhoea, if they are present" voring them by draughts of water: or Inducing them by bA if necessary. The chief dangw"! cases of food-poisoning Is froiM of the heart which organ shoo sisted by stimulants, strong bM fee. etc. Of course. In every e tor should be summoned as oo1 slble. Youth's Companion. Relics of a Lost Tribe in M A valuable archeological findW been made near the ancient Too Much for Him. The other day a young man was pre sented to Senator Hanna who wanted a subordinate Dlace in th. i-v. Senator saw to It that his application -gorod. ou the banks of Uk'l W nmnopl. : i .1 . - ... " 1 . . . . . ... . .. Ll iue aruciea iouna tncinae uuj Cint artowneads, spearheads, of slate, flint fishhooks, and M mous mass of crockery and i fragments, ornamented in tw style as those found nrevloOll,!l parts of the same nrovince. al gists consider the discovery the existence in the neighbofJ Lake Ilmen of a numerous pn during the stone age. TbeJ found are all of one class t8 Indicating the existence of H able tribe, which must baveeit'1 wiped out or have migrated regions before attaining any stage of culture than that of i age. London Standard. was properly filed. Nothing . k . of the application or the young Irish man for several days, until he sent his card through the doorkeeper of the Sen- rranakndesI,iq8l0lUar'dem DuTanr b0W'9 eVerTthiB u. soldier. I got through the physical examination all right but tbey Suicide in the Frem h The French Militaire pubUeTsUH Oc. showing that cases f sZl verr freonont i ...... su'cide are moreao' eH.r,'". "my. o perhaps thau in .u y' ropean force. Among every i oun T In the arm, from .1? aLlT" than an average of 50 on iw leM 50. d in i? 51) are canse? bytelr destruction; while In ever, mSo J on the rolls of the army anaverage of 27 commlf sulc dTeverv year Among the colonial troon. ' number la even higher th Second Sight Bes- Singleton-They say Meekt lovp With his nlt. at first SlEW BenedlcliWVll I'll tiet be 1 had been gifted with second tifl Truth. Even If a man remember :! tastes after marriage, the cb' she like seems to be best mind. Uneasy rests the aching W C E in t si T It & E id al M Mil i In It th i I r ftii Ca s In. Mi TI wars a crown.