OCR Text |
Show JUAB COUNTY TIMES, NEPHI. UTAH m 'WIGHT WSMHlf Trie heart -- - r ' n. Of TH6 GREAT NORTH WESr Oy VINGIE E.ROE A STORY ILLUSTRATIONS SYNOPSIS. 8 of DHlly'a lumber ramp dlrecta a atraimor to ih camp. Waller Bunilry lntrulurt-htinH'ir to John lmlly. foreman, mm "the Iillllnuwnrth Lumber "'.. or most of II." Hh mukea with the cninp anil lh work. Ha givea Hileii pirmlaalnn to rlila HlHtk Holt, hl aadilte Iioimu. In un emergem-- he prove to the f'iri'inftn that he dm-- not luck JudKiiifnl. Hilda tella him of the 4'rou. He riiacovera Hint bllets the alien of the Hilels tribe of Inilluna and wnndrra what lu-In the biii name la fluHh of a temlt-moment he calla her ''the NiHht Wlnil In the I'lnea." and klaHea her. 1'oppy OrJunv, a magazine writ r from New Vork. timiea to I :i y to net tuateriul for a rontanre of the lumher Ilattiiiilen of the Vellow Tinea t o. Hiinta Kiui.lry to keep off trart of he clalnia title to an"! Sundry bmiiiiIuik tlilnka he hna lioimht hh the KmmI Kilt. Ilnuilulen aeta up a caliln on the Kant Melt unit uurna treapasseis off. Snndry an find no written evidence of title to the trait. Ilia men pull down the eitlitn. Hnnilry roniimree SiL-land puppy. and ll impden'a men flnhl over the disputed tin. I. The ampa the rWmliv flmla that the deed to the ohl. Kan! Iti-m He ttren reconh-dto.ver , declihn ( K,.t all, for the Htuinpniirt ,.,,!,,.! flht loipv eiila ami lllrta with Hampden o Kaln trhkery Ilia coundenie. She tella Sandrv that Hampden la crooked and that ahe'll get hint i'otiy soea to Kalein In aeareh of evidence ataliini Hampden. Kandry and nlletr. rhle to the Meaahore and tilletx aeea the orean for the firm time. Kmidiy'a men cleaert him for who haa offered more money Hampden, Htleti goea to her Trlenda the Slwaahea and perainulea Ihein work for Han dry to auve Ida ronlrii-t- . I oppy tell Sundry that ahe haa proof of llan.pd.na llllnx hiua entrlea In collu-lo- n with the conitiilaaloner. SI let t a a r s Ban-tlry- 'a aru-rwur- CHAPTER XV ,t Continued. stammered Slletx, 'l Yet tli ore la some- hardly know, thing." She fell silent moment, standing beside hlro. "The winds of God are heavy on my oul. Eandry." she aald at laxt. ear nestly. "and they toll me that you re Bud. What can I do oh. what can I do to help 7" There was In her voice the simple cry of a sympathy so intense that It was anguish, and Sandry's lips tightened in the darkness. For a heady moment he could scarce resist the bidding of the lawless thrill that she was ever capable of sending through him. to take ber into his arms as be bad done that day when she beheld the sea. Hut a tardy thought of Miss Ordway shut bis bands upon themselves and steadied bis voice. He put bis hands upon ber shoulders and turned ber round. "Go back to Ma Ually. child." be aid. but bis voice had fallen to whisper, a whisper that was a caress laden as heavily with wistful sadness as a whisper might be. "and don't fret I am all right.". Without a word, obedient to blra a the primal woman ever Is to man. Hilctrwent away Jn the night toward th As site passed op the path she al most brunhed the garments of Poppv Ordway. standing in rigid silence, ber bands shut In the folds of ber gown, ber rose lips anben. ber eyes strained "Why-w- hy. cook-shac- wide. "Koolt faywiTfc 6y Fool! Fool!" the woman was thinking In a rage of passion "Why didn't I suspect T She is torn thing to blm she bas her charm There Is danger in ber to me oh Fandry. you stupid, simple heart!' For Poppy Ordway bad beard the ca rcss of that lowered voice. The new passion In ber took fright, and a furl ous. choking rage sent the blood hot Upon her heart. The next morning he found upon bis window ledge a handful of fern and a pray of tiny, yellow, watlike Bowers that were beginning to show where the little strrarrs tore down the tnoun tains. He .g their rocky beds. took them In and put (beta sway In a drawer among his papers, ailent voice of a sympathy that waa as delicate as It was strong. That morning when Toppy Ordway encountered Hilett the bright smil- he gsve ber covered a sudden hatred that had sprung, full grown, from a man's low whlftper; and the bad times that followed for tba girl bad their Inception then. pole an' Klamath Sara walkln' th shores fer five days an' they're the two worst Slwashes on th' reservation Hampden knows they're workln' fer S'letz. an' that when I said shoot or cut they'd shoot or cut ef It took four yeara an' a dark night to do It." That first day drifted by very swiftly, soft and sunny between showers, and by four o'clock the ebb of the tide, grown Blower and slower, bud ceased altogether. Daily and the rest tied up the raft, head and tail on both sides, using heavy steel ropes and chains, to which they gave plenty of slack. They cooked supper ashore and Sundry thought he had never tasted better fare. Afterward they lay about the Ore all together, smoking, and only the silence of the Siletz marked the line of color. Triumph filled the heart of the young lliiunclt-and IiIh lull drowsy thoughts were of the steamer thht was even now plowing down from 1'ortlund to meet them, the huge check that would follow his delivery of the how he would lift a certain logB mortguge of the loud that hung upon the lililiiigworth, lis greatest menace In point of time. He waked to see the heavy chains drawn taut, to bear the mass of creaking and grumbling as It strained upstream, and knew that the tide was In. The Siwash cook waked the men by moonlight for breakfast. They must be ready to take advantage of the first motion toward the sea. The cuating loose, the slow start, the moving of the night shores San-drwished Miss Ordway might see It It might be a hit of local color in the mysterious book she was writing In the little south room Ills mind went over I hat little room. He saw the stand with the ancient lllble. He shuddered a bit with the night chill as be saw aguln the words. "Oh. Absalom! My son, my son!" Those were the last words that the mind of the Easterner were to know for many days. The nose of the raft where he was standing suddenly rose under blm like a thing of life. The night opened, flame shot upward from the dark waters. Immeasurable sound smote bis eardrums to silence, pain that waa unendurable stretched and tore bis limbs. He sailed away Into night and the world was not. When the thing was over John Daily picked himself up from whe.e be had been blown clear of the raft and the water, landing in tangle of blueberry vines, and screamed a curse at tbe serene heavens. "Ob. God damn bis soul to hell!" be cried, balf after the manner of a prayer; "bc'a blowed her up at last!" In the awful rllence that fell In the first moments there set tp a great groaning of the timbers. The wrecked and opened prow of the raft slewed to the right. Jammed Into the shore, snd was holding the rest, while the strong tide urged it bard upon itself Above It Dally lifted his voice and called his Indians, and there was an guih In his heart. "Koottah! 8namlahta! Memmtloo'" From here and there voices an awered. some far. some near, and pres ently figures crept fearfully Into the moonlight from the matted ferns, gath erlrtg about the foreman Here one dragged an 'tjured ankle another stsnched the blood ftom a r tlm-ber- a the night with his stentorian voice as he called upon Sandry's naui6. From time to time he listened. Then he lighted a torch and widened bis circle, peering Into every covert of fern, behind every log, and even searching the branches of the trees. He bad seen the pines bear ghastly fruit a time or two when a blast of giant powder had gone wrong. After a long time he straightened and his muddy face waa blanched. "Done for!" he said aloud to the dusk of the forest, bitterly. "Down an' done for an" him bo damned good for an Easterner!" Out even as he spoke a cry sounded from the water far ahead another an swered, another and another, as the Siletz drew In to each other somewhere out In the dim moonwash. and he knew they had found him. So they had a limp body lying bent back acrosa a floating log. tbe pearl buttotiB on Its breast shining and its hair dabbling In the water. They pushed the log with its burden In to shore and big John Daily, wading out. picked up his employer aa a mother lifts a child, carried him back up the bank and bent to listen for life in the still bream. It was there. The timber-maran a hand, experienced and gentle, over the sprawling arms. "liusted!" he aald bitterly, "legs too! He's crumpled like a broken tule! If I don't take this out of Hampden, I hope I'll burn In hell!" He gathered the scattered blnnkets from bush and tree branch and laid the Eusterner upon them. Then this simple son of the big country went off by himself Into the shadows to think. What should he do? Here was his employer, this Easterner who was going through the ordeal by fire to win bis right to live and fight in the wild land, and he was all but worsted, down and out. His life waa not worth a copper that coin of which tbe large West takes no notice and far on the shores of the other ocean was that old father of whom he had told Dally In tbe quiet talks at night. It would take quick work to get Sandry to a doctor and word should be sent East at once. On tbe other hand, if Sandry should live and the contract bad been lost bis fight would be over. Those mortgages of w hich he bad spoken vaguely would be foreclosed and the Dilling-wortwould become a thing of tbe paHt. the East Kelt go by tbe board and Hampden would be supreme in the bills. "No. by beaven. he'd want "her to go through dead or alive, an I'll see her there!" waa Daily's ultimatum as he rose from the log in the pink flare of sunrise, and could be have known all that Sandry would Iobo with that contract and the Dillingwortb bia hatred of Hampden would have been deeper still, for Sandry was bia friend. He went back to the huddled Indians and the silent figure on Its blankets. "Meuimiloo." be aald decisively, You an' "make quick a polo sling. big Hill an Multoowah an' Jim Pine-trewill take Sandry back to camp. Go first to Toledo aa' get Doc Hooker have blm do what he can there an' go along to camp. Tell biro to stay with Sandry day an' night till I get bark. Hurry now." Without a word, the four Indians picked out by name set about their appointed task. In less time than a white man would take to begin they had laid clean saplings along blankets' edges warped a short spreader at top and bottom to bold the poles tbe width a' man shoulders apart, and tbe sling was resdy. "Now." said Dally grimly, "travel like hell. boys, but carry him soft, for be s broke like the ferns when a pine e falls" TTni wffinm u-- I ! rn t n - shifted gently until they stood, a baca ground for tbe pallid girl in the rougb western garb. MUs Ordway smiled, though a bard brilliance rame into her April Birth Stone Is a Diamond, set either in gold or We make all kinds and kissed has "lie said. she platinum. 'Perhaps," many, it Is the way of tne outsiae styles of mountings. world." Ring! complete, io liandwme mount Ingt, boa She turned to the physician. aad anappy. $25 up. "When do you think he will recover Mail oidrn peilcclly tattj. consciousness?" Her cool voice terminated the senna She was mistress of tbe hour. fUtfNOCP rat With both hands extended before MAKERS OF JEWELRY ber Siletz went blindly out Into tbe 100 MAIM 41 Wit SALT IAKE CITt! sunlight. She stood a moment, ber breath coming and going in great gasps, like that of a doe mortally i Any aizo roll film 1 f wounded, and In ber eyes waa no light. developed . . . IU CCIUS fled to she wounded doe, Like the . Any size film pack OA CooBnah tbe hills for sanctuary. developed . . . ZU CCIUS swung into his puce behind her; and presently, after an hour's climb, they Salt Lake Photo Supply Co. reached tbe great fir stump on tbe 1M 8. Main Htrpet Halt Lake City, Ctab crest of the ridge. Here the girl flung ber on ber knees, gripping herself braids In savage fingers, and for a wild space something within her that she had never known in all her life arose NgLSOSJ-ttlCKCREAMERY CO. ft.su and shook her. She hud gone back a Salt take City. Utah was Blind upon rage thousand years. her she wanted to tight as tbe preTOUCHED HEART PORTER'S historic female fought for her mate. So she knelt and rocked In the lust of fury while the little clouds sailed Ceorg Could Not Take Money From in an azure sky and the hill streams Man Who Waa Less Fortunate trickled to the valleys, and suddenly Than Himself. a bird in a high pine top dropped a A correspondent sends us an string of notes, clear, silvery, sparfrom a yet unpublished work to kling, for all the world like tbe diamond notes of a flute and Instantly she be entitled "A.Sentiiuontui Journey to cowered under them, covering her eyes the l'acltlc Coast" In Instinctive guilt. "It was about seven o'clock. In th ITO HE CONTINUED.) evening." relates Mr, Thornton, "when the following conversation took placo RILEY HAD TO WRITE JINGLES between myself and tbe porter, who, strangely enough, was called George: Former Schoo' Teacher Recalls Day "'Well,' said I, 'It has been a nice When the Loved Poet Was day. No noise, no dust, smooth ridHer Pupil. ing and an empty car?" " 'Ileggln' yo' pardon, sun, demurred "Jingles" and not regular studies oc George, 'Ah begs to dlffah with you, cupied tbe school hours of James sun. It's been an exceedingly po day Whltcomb Riley, the noted Hoosler today, sua.' do you speak thus, George?' poet, according to Mrs. "Tihby" VI- "'Why " 'In d fust years old, of Athens, rey, seventy-thre- e place, dey's been no Dat means less Tenn.. who is visiting with Mrs. S A, dust, as you say. Rice of Covington, Ky.. the Cincinnati brushin', an' less brushln' means slim Commercial-Tribunstates. tips. Dey's been nobody on de cyah, "In the year 1860-C1- , when I taught as you remark. Dat means slim pick-InIn the subscription school at Green Yessub, dat a bow aha go. Ah field, lnd., Riley was one of m pupils. depends on da travelln" public fo' suband, although be was a good student. sistence. Ah'm de oldes' potah on d he never carried oS tbe honors of his line. Man bald done grow gray In da class. service, an' man life Is a failure, sub. "I felt sorry, so I banded blm a "His chief delight was to bide be dime. I said: 'I'm sorry I can't mak hind some other pupil and compos 'Jingles,' as be called them, and wben it more, George, but this Is all I bav. caught in tbe act always explained I'm In the law business.' "'Well, of co'se dey's always dost that be bad to write, as the verses dat's wusser off dan us,' said George, were always going through his mind. "Composition came natural to him brightening up. 'Ab'm sorry fo' you, and be would stop in tbe midst of a sun.' "And he banded in back mf dim. task to Jot down some little verse. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Wben be was about eighteen years old he ran away with a traveling medicine Nearly Transparent. show and later painted signs on fences. Juat as tba football match was getbut would atop work suddenly to It began to rain. A sprawl out on tbe grass by tbe road- ting Interesting man tn tb front row of side and Jingle." umMrs. L'lrey attended tbe celebration tbe stand Immediately raised his wors which was for lb rather brella, recent in honor of the poet which was wear. ly held In Indianapolis and she and ber As soon as It appeared, however, th former pupil spent several hours tobehind blm began to grumble people old schooldays. gether recalling the thst they couldn't sea the gam. Th Individual at one turned Canada's Giant Trees. to them and said In a supercilious The 225 foot long "spar" of Doug vote: ) las fir. a gift from British Columbia. "I er beg your pardon! But cant which Is to be erected a a flagstaff you see over my umbrella? in Kew Gardens, in England, Is typi"No," replied a voice from tb rear, cal of hundreds of similar pieces of "we can't see over, but we can Dearly of In forests which tbe timber grow see through It!" western Canada. The Kew Gardens owNew Road to Rlche. flagstaff, which was taken down Bom time since a little girl who ing to Its Insecure condition In December, 1913, and which was ISO feet lived In a rural community appeared at tbe back door of a neighbor's bouse In length, also came from British Columbia and carried the flag In Kew with a small baaket In ber band. "Mrs. Gardens for over balf a century. It BiDlth," said she, as tbe neighbor an was presented to the gardens by the swered ber timid knock, "mother late Mr. K. Stamp and was brought wants to know If yon won't please to England by a sailing ship, via lend ber a doten eggs. Sb wants to put tbeta under a ben. Cape Horn. In 1861. When It was de"Put them under a ben?" was tb cided to lake It down two years ago it occupied a big taff of workmen wondering rejoinder of tb neighbor. "I didn't know that yon bad a ben." over a fortnight In figging up th "W haven't," was tb frank reply necessary derricks and gear for lowering It to the ground. Pall Mall Ga- of th little girl. "W ar going to borrow th ben from Mrs. Browa. zette. face. BOYD PARK ( Cream Wanted S Avi-iiii-k gr: Tenderly they lifted the owner ol the D'llltigworth snd laid him In tbe hollow of the blankets. as His foreman cast one look at the Itvllnns swung away on the back trail and turned bis fare to the Jammed raft. He at mlled the problem from all sides Then he took his re mainlng Indians, for none of them rY'i were beyond work from their shaking It, ,,,':' up, got off the mooting chains snd snubbed the monster to the shore pines fore and aft. Then he calmly prepared to wail the turn of the tide She would loose herself. The damage at the prow waa slight Tbe llfl had come a moment too soon to hurt the big raft much. Several of the binding chains at the extreme head of her had been broken, loosen ng the ends of the logs which slid downward and apart. Riving ber tbe appnarsnce of a ragged broom ' Snamishta, like all the coast Indt He of am. was a good waterman fered to dive for the broken chains CHAPTER XVI. and Dally let htm go In three hours be bad found all the ends, fastened The 8 a Raft, io them hauling lines, which the others On the fourteenth of March the to bring them up, the breakage wbeety tug pulled the great, brown was repaired and Iaily was ready to clgarshaped monster that meant so mend the broken nose as well as he much to S'andry arid the fortunes of could. He needed to circle the loos tbe Dillingwortb from Its moorings cried logs with the chains again, and out to the nsrrow. deep neck of the !.' went about It in a simple manner. . I c Bach to fca Oafy, Child.' that would lake it to (he There was no getting under the raft and with there his hands, ragged scalp fcandry for the first time In bis life svered drunkenly from th fall from the front because of the Jam felt tbe slow sliding motion as the on the shore, even If Snamlsbta great oval floor responded to the be hsd got. but all eight at counted for against could have managed the tide and en themselves rrer hit.g tue and the ehb tide. "Hoys." said Daily tensely, "all who dured the time under water. There On Urard with Sandrv were Dsllv swim get Into the water quirk! fore It must be done from tbe other and eight Itidisn. all armed and wait end. Ir.g for anything that might develop Sandry was standln' alone at her nose So Daily laid the chains across tbe Hut Hampden bad no notion of meet It a a hundred to one hi's done for!" a question, the Indiana spreading nose, attached a long tow asked one So In mood h's John Daily preaent Ing and It seemed as If all was to go accepting with their pathetic fatalism line to the shore ends and dropped As the rsft drew majes- this disaster which would have set the them Into the water. The line was smoothly. then led to the stern, under the moortically abreaat of the mill at Toledo tone'ies of white men flying Silently tbe Ave who wpre unharmed ing rhalns. around and forward to tbe the Vellow Fines owner was con!picti ous on the dock, though he did not ap- ecept for bruises slipped Into the prow. He then lay down for a needed rest anything beyond the pile heavily running tidewaterand and disapof until the sucking pear to gTeen water grew flotsam the amid Jetaatn was lumber be of raw, bright marking peered wore a sardonic grin. the long bay whlro traveled always slower and slower and finally stopped l!ls florid fs altogether. "John." said Fr,dry, "If s wonder aimlessly back and forth. With tbe first Insidious movement of of the raft grew In vol Tbe do suret to groaning didn't something Hampden flood tide the groaning and creak the subsided tb few a minutes. for time or with oe tbe Jam togs bay binder set on np again throughout the gisnt. the settled. and ing as kxked Dally It tie-- as np nff)ft way bad John Teeter ' shore began threshir,- tbe (eras, filling and tba foreman waa on bia feet at Might, onl I tv once as she began, almost Imperceptibly, to back out from the shore. Tbe ends of the chains were hauled up slipped forward and fastened securely after tbe logs bad been coaxed together as much as was possible with rope and peavey and cant book. "By jingo!" said Daily, "but that was a blast. The son-o- f a gun must have bad a wagon-loao' sticks. An' it was a 'plant,' all right. Must've had some batt'ries an' a trigger wire. But he hain't smart enough to rigger out such things. Twa'n't th' right slant, or she'd a hit us amidHhlps an' opened us up proper an' we'd a gone to sea in pieces." Tbe hours of tbe flood tide were Irksome to him, waiting, wondering how it fared with Sandry swinging ho- pt "No, by Heaven. He'd Want Her to Go Through." tween the Indians, and thinking bit terly of Hampden, who was proving himself a dangerous enemy. But he thought also of the steamer plowing down from Portland, which would stand In at Yaquina, and be knew he would be ready to turn over tbe raft In spite of all. "Be a damn hard matter to tow by that bead," be told himself; "guess we can drift ber out an' turn her tail on." Then he fell to wondering If Sandry would ever know of the big check, or If it would travel east with blm to the old man in the wheeled chair on Riverside drive mute evidence of tbe tenderfoot's first and last fight! CHAPTER XVII. A Hard Knock. d It was a sweet spring day, , with a riot of and bird songs In tbe pines when the little cavalcade bore Walter Sandry up tbe vivid valley. They took hlro up the slope and nto the office and held bim while Si letz flew to tbe bouse for many more blankets to pile high on the spring cot. and presently they laid blm, a sadly broken thing, upon It. The color had drained from the dark face of tbe girl, and her hands, shut hard, bung tensely In tbe folds of ber skirt as a silence fell with the easing of tbe man upon tbe bed. "lMctor " she said hoarsely; "doc and could gel no rurtner. tor The doctor bad known her for tbe several years he had been In the country and he studied ber face a moment before answering. "Close call. S'letz." be said gently; he'll llve maybe not." For a moment she swayed upon her feet, ringing ber bands acrvtfs ber eyes, while ber breath came l catch Ing gasps. "But God sits above the sea!" she cried st last, tragically. "Oh. Father. apare him, for he Is an unbeliever!" At this tense moment Poppy Ord way. who had been watrhlng from the background with parted lips and kindling eyes, stepped forward. "Dot tor Mrs. Dally," she said, "this terrible thing forces me to speak of something wblch I and Walter also bad not Intended to make known at present. I am Mr. Sandry' prom Ised wife and as sucb I will take charge of him." All ber life had this woman taken rbnnces. sharp chances, fraught with swift danger and trying to nerve and skill, but never had she done a harder thing than to face this little group of Westerners whose Instinct matched ber art. They turned upon ber In thunderstricken silence- - the doctor with a clean amaze, tbe Indians In stoical quiet. Ma Dally with an astonishment that was only the forerunner of antag onlstic reaction. But of thorn all It was the face of Siletz, fallen ipon ber knees beside the cot, that shook the heart In ber. chilled ber bold spirit. It lifted Itself, panting, white and awful. Its lips where the broken Sign stood plainly out. fallen apart and col orless. The dark eyes stared upon het with an uncomprehending horror that Irritated her. "I know something of nursing and we'll do out best " But here Siletz sprang up to ber slim height and ber voice smote the bushed room like tba snapping of a blue-arche- fitful-aired- e well-dresse- well-dresse- Wild Things a Pest In Franc. The prohibition Imposed by tb French government upon bunting ba caused wild animals and birds to multiply so rapidly during this tummef that crops In the fields and In orchard and gardens In various forest regions bav been ravaged. Th tnenac has become so serious that tb government authorities ar now killing rab bits, hares, pheasants and other animals and birds wblrh bav fed upon th growing crops. The killing Is done on specified days by those In th com mune who have proper authorization The huntsmen act collectively, no Individual sportsman being allowed to go out for game. Guns ar not used Id the work except under the supervision of gendarmes, and then only when oth er means of disposing of the game, such as traps and ferrets, are not avail at Wherever possible, tbe game It taken alive, and transferred to other j parts of th country for restocking purposes. Workings of Conscience. Individual In a Chicago saloon turned from th ttiubter, where be bad been helping himself most generously, and said to tb barkeeper: "Friend, can you trust m for a g'sss of beer till tomorrow?" "No," said tbe barkeep. "I am sorry to bear that," aald tb seedy one. "It seems ktnder mean to eat th amount of free lunch 1 bav and not buy notblnT A seedy-lookin- g free-lunc- h Hew Nlcsl rbyllls "Aren't tb aew rtonton traffic rules lust lovely fur as girls?" Ethel "How sor Phyllis "Why. didn't rou know tbey were going to bav sophomores stationed at every downtown street corner?" Boston Transcript. ! Art f The art of may be considered to bave made a consider-abl- e sdvance wben someone brings out an autobiography without aa "1" Chance to Think. "Miss Gadders talks so much and so to It. Judge. fast that it is Impossible to get In a Elusiv &cisors. word." A colored ribbon tied to scissors "Yes. but I find her conversation a will give many minutes that are othgreat balp to me at times," aald ProA fessor Diggers, who I compelled to erwise spent in looking for them. of ribbon Is Siire ty tret nearly piece bis to fulfill lesve study occasionally to show where the scissors ar baif bis social obligations taut wire. bidden under papers or sewing. "No!" she cried In anguished pro"Impossible!" It Is I "Nevertheless WTien me am true He "No! and kissed test. quite Worth While Quotation. she talks I'm able to concentrat my . Etrotig Impulses are but another bis woman!" Tbey faced each other across the mind on matters that demand my unam for energy. Energy tea f b unconscious form of the man, these divided attention, whereas tf I were la lurned to bad t?rt mot good may two women from the ends of the earth, the society of a less voluble person I always be made of an energetic naand war raised Its banner between might, now and then, bav to mak ture than of an Indolent and la pes them, t'nnoticed, the four Indians soma sort of reply." lv tie John Stuart MM, ! u; |