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Show T -- i ar T was the night before the city waa ablaze with The first MWURMtflQ' Thank-.givin- " Beamed hearted. light The maaaiTe manaiona ' f vT aa be threw hlmaelf day, and on hia bed, hungry and brokenhearted, he realized the mistake he bad made in living in a dream, lie made firm resolutions to reform, but as his fingers clinched in newborn resolve his eyes strayed across the way again. For the second time that evening hia heart stood still. Behind the soft lace curtains of the Goldthwait mansion shadows of people flitted to and fra The house was inhibited again but by strangers, of coarse, he thought Thanksgiving day found Jack poorer and hungrier than he had ever been before in hia life. For forty-eighoars he had not tasted food, bnt he determined to breakfast in almost total emptiness of spite of the bis pocket-book- . He turned his face toward the lower portion of the city, determined to accept whatever work offered itself, bnt it was a holiday, and several hours spent in tramping the quiet streets Jack turned his face homeward. Aa he trudged up Broadway a clatter on the stones behind attracted his attention and n driver-les- s cab dashed into sight. An elderly man was gesticulating wildly from the window. With n bound Jack responded. In another moment the runaway horse stood panting in the roadway, and Jack's siuewyjhand was on the bit One dollar to drive me np to shouted the man. But your driver?" asked Jack. Drunk in a saloon, was the response. Without another word Jack leaped up to the cabbye seat and whipped up the horse. It was the first time he had ever earned a dollar by manual labor, and aa he ellnched hia teeth firmly a flush mounted to his cheek When the once familiar restaurant came into sight Jack thought, with moisture Jn hia eye of the many timet he and Dora bad lunched in the As room. he dining great reined up before, it) haggard ht that anrronnded Gramercy park were brightly lighten. In muffled alienee a young man, hurried by cloakleaa and gloveles the iron barn that fence in the little acre of the rich toward his lodging place. For five yeara Jack Fleming had lived alone. No one knew very much about him, except that he was a thriftless indolent genius. When hia father died the fortune that might have gone to him had endowed certain Ilia wealthy charitable institution mother had died in nis infancy, and Jack Fleming had grown up with the aervanta and bin books for companions. lie had never seen enough of hia father to love him. ' In his childhood Jack had had one friend, Dora Goldth wait She was a beautiful girl, several years his junior, who lived in the house adjoining his fathers, and every dav one or the other would climb the fence that separated them and drop over into the little yard for a romp. Dora waa proud of her protector and playmate, for even then Jack was full of book knowledge, and Dora soon learned to love Shakespeare and Milton as read aloud by her nera. Another great tramping place for the little people waa Gramerej park, for both houses faced the handsome and Mr. Goldthwait and Jlavground were among the favored rich who possessed keys to the great Iron gate that shut out the children of the poor, who often lined the iron fence and peered wistfully between the bars at the smiling lawn within. The children were inseparable until Jack was 13 and Dora 13. Then Jack went to college, but every holiday found him at home again, and often books went by the board and Jack came home on the sly to see his little sweetheart Of course, on these occasions he was smuggled into Doras home and good natnred, easy going Mr. Goldthwait would have thought it the basest treachery for any member of bis family to inform his next door neighbor, Jack's father, that hia son waa playing truant HK SAT OX Ilia BED AXD THOUGHT. After three years of college Jack and mud difbespattered, totally his in behind was hopelessly studies, ferent from hia old self, be of the and hia father, still ignorant started with amazement There, reason, called him a blockhead. One subon the sidewalk waa the day Jack received a tender, loving standing ject of hia dream not the Dora of letter from Dora asking him to come old, with short frock and curling hair home at once, as her father had just in the wind, bnt the beautireceived word from England that he streaming into which the years had had fallen heir to a large property, ful woman her. including a theater in one of the large changed reFor n moment Jnek eonld cities, and the business of the latter strain hlmaelf from rushinghardly forward was In urgent need of his immediate and declaring hia identity. Bnt n attention. The family would sail for of his clothes and hia work England immediately, but Dora thought made him stop. Re became aa anxious wanted Jack to go with them, if he to hide bis face aa he bad been a mocould. A few hours after receiving before to tell hia name. the letter Jack stood in front of the ment Dora and her father passed Into the Goldthwait residence on Gramercy restaurant and Jack earned n second It was dosed. No servant park. driver for hi answered the bell, and Jacks heart dollar by getting n new coupe. Be passed and refell like lead. Again he looked at the passengers passed the restaurant in an unsucletter. It waa dated two days before cessful attempt to get another glimpse and had been delayed in the mails. of the woman At home he found his father, but in a satisfied hia ha loved before he even hunger. mood in which he had never seen him It was dark before he went back to before. hia little room and stationed himself .You young rascal I he shouted as once more at hia window to gaze at So been have Jack entered. you the lights in the Goldthwait mansion, wasting your time next door instead lie was filled with a conflict of love of studying. He had no reason to beand No pleading on the part of Jack lievepride. Dora had not forgotten him, that man old to could induce the turbulent ns bnt hia love for her was as tell where the Goldthwaits had gone. ever, lie longed to go to her,strong but the Never mind, thought Jack, Ill knowledge of hia poverty and shabbi-nehear from her soon, and then kept him back. Jiut no letter came. Weeks lengthThe windows of the great old dinened into months and Jack grew tall ing room were bright with light and and thin. One day he went up to his their raised curtains revealed to him a college town, and an inquiry at the clear view of the place where he and post office eliicted the fact that several Dora had spent many happy Thanksletters had come, up to a month ago, giving reunions together, lie saw her but they had been forwarded to flitting about the table as of old, putGramercy park. ting the finishing touches on the arThat night father and son faced rangement of fra its and flower He each other for the last time. eonld see her plainly. She looked even Where are the letters Dora wrote younger and more beautiful than me?" demanded Jack, ss he leaned over she bad that afternoon in her heavy toward the old man, who stood smiling street wrap sarcastically in his face. Half an hour passed and some one 1 told you that if yon refused to else came into the room a tall handwould it," to regret return college you some man. Dorn seemed to forget was the reply. her household duties, for she hung on and heel his on turned passed the mans arm, and seemed to plead Jack house. out of the with him. At last he sat down, and Re found it a harder struggle than then still another person eame in; it 11 is income fluctuated I was Mr. Goldthwait he expected. They sat by the from next to nothing to nothing itself, ' fire, with Dora between them. She He became first a wanderer among waa talking earnestly, and the handboarding some stranger seemed to be listening apartments, then among houses, and at last an inhabitant of intently. Occasionally Jack could see furnished rooms," who ate at cheap that Mr. Goldthwait spoka Then Dots Sudrestaurants when ho could eat at alL would beam with happy smile lie had lived a week in a rear hall denly she jumped up from her seat, bestreet and a moment later when she rebedroom on Twenty-seconfore tie discovered that its windows turned she bad in her hands n flutwere only separated from those of tering manuscript on She read it The old smile played his old home and that of Dora,New the brief about her lip The gestures waved (ira mercy park, by which Itmaddened Jack. they used the graceful hand York back yards in He felt that he must be near her once to play together. The Goldthwait house was dark. It had been ever more must hear her voice again. to it A wisteria vine ran down from his since the dav Dora left. Next where his fathers mansion loomed up window. Clasping the strong dry were stock. Jack descended until he stood against the trees beyond, lights often seen. But strangers occupied on the fence so dear to hia memory. Softly he crept along until he reached the familiar rooms. at the rear of the On Thanksgiving eve just five years the little veranda mansi-mand peering since he had left his old life behind Goldthwait through the window he feasted nis eyes him. Jack went to his dingy little on the girl he loved. window to gaze at the two mansions. Jack was overcome as he saw again He shivered with cold; but the blood he all the little details of the room rushed quickly to his face whenloved which once had been so familiar to he still the of home girl saw the him. He bowed hia head. He pushed an instant For up. brightly lightedamazed. Then he sat against the glass of the swinging winhe stood still, dow. The window o ned n trifle. down on his bed to think, Finally, Jack started back frightened, but the he discouraged, and downhearted was still outside, and the inmates turned to n ffreat pile of niEnuHcript sir picking of the room had not noticed. How he snd rubbl'd! on the floor End mese he could hear Dora's voice. It said: nondescript a book from the leaves. Now. Mr. Langdon,let me read the turned over the tJ yon before dinner is an-- Twelve pi a vs out. he muttered to climax need. lost. noil of then, probably himself; five sent hisbestand Ganglion was the name of the Eng--! Only that dav he hadnew actor iish actor to whom Jack had sent his latest comedv to the da English i ' before. As play, and as Dora's sweet voice read who hud arrived the n on, Jack realized that it was hia own soon a it was rehearsed ( i she was reading. doubled not it would be) he would comedy The climax was rendered with tellsend the o' hers in rotation The two men leaned for-- 1 For mnniliH he had expected success ing effect. to uuinc wish the dawn of every new ward with interest Capital! Capital!" cried Lsngdoa. Jack waa filled with intense excitement lli bauds were clinched. Do you accept it?" asked Dora, of the actor. triumphantly, 1 do. was the reply. It la the comedy that 1 have been waiting for. " 1 will write to him then." said Dora. The beautiful girl sank mud hack in her chair went on: And now I will tell you n storv that will explain why I was so anxious to have you take the play." Jack listened breathlessly. Vou see, said llora, I used to have n friend here named John Fleming. When we went abroad I wrote to him, bnt he did not answer my letI lost sight of him, bull did not ter lose my well, my regard for him." A splendid fellow," interrupted Mr. Gobi th wait. There never was one like him," said Dorn. Then she went on: Weil, New York we reached when last week father and I began to look him up, and we found In the firat place that the reason he had not answered my letters was because hia father, who waa angry at both of ua, had intercepted them; in the second place, that father and son were never reconciled, and that the old gentleman disinherited Jack when he died, and In the third place that Jack had been ever since barely making n living out of literary work and trying to get some one to produce hia play We finally got track of him this morning, and this morning also I saw the manuscript of this play lying on the table where you had left it when you brought it up from the theater. The words By John Fleming caught my attention at once, and 1 picked it np and rend it It seemed to me so strange that I made up my mind that yon shouldn't send it back without reading it, so I read it to yon myself. And now I shall send for Jack tomorrow and when he comes I shall have good news for him. And and good news for Jack is ia good news for for me, yon ace. 8o 1 am very ' happy." There waa a noise of an opening window, and Jack, wild eyed and unkempt, bnt very joyful, stepped in. For a moment they did not recognize him, hut when thev did this Well, said Mr. Langdon, climax heat any thing in your play. Yea" added Mr. Goldthwait, and it is doubly good because it will he followed by a real Thanksgiving dinner. THE UBIQUITOUS LAMP. Its Usa la tba llousa Is Hasad aa Artistic Principles. Art, aa wall as the fashion, demands that artificial light shall not be glaring; and many are the devices resorted to in order to give proper effect and tone to n light that would otherwise spoil the whole aspect of a room. One reason why lamps are so much in favor now, in place of gas, ia on account of their adaptability to the various methods of subduing and diversifying the light; and they truly deserve the popularity they hol& Almost from time immemorial lamps have had a high artistic value, and there Is no ono article more frequently seen In collections of antique art pieces than the various lamps of clay, porcelain, bronze and other metal In the ruins of Herculaneum and Pompeii lamps of every size and nil kinds have been found, from the tiny night lamp to the high and elaborate floor lamps, not unlike those we now call piano lamps, says Domorests Magazine. But never before In the history of lamps have they received such attention or been subject to such elaborate decoration ns they are today. The shade has become an essential part of the lamp, and one would no more think of setting up n handsome lamp of any kind without some shade to soften Its light than one would think of having a cabinet without any m bric-a-bra- c. Paper Palp. Paper can he. manufactured out of almost anything that can be pounded into pulpi Over fifty kinds of bark are said to be used, and banana akin bean stalks, pea vine oocoaaut fiber, clover and timothy hay, straw, sea and fresh water weed and many kinds of grass are all applicable. It has also been made from hair.fur and wool, from asbestos, which furnishes an article indestructible by fire; from hop plants, from husks of any and every kind of grain. Leaves make n good strong paper, while the husk and stems of Indian corn have also been tried, and almost every kind of moss can be made into paper. There are patents for making paiier from sawdust and shavings, from thistles and thistle down, from tobacco stalks and tanbark. It is said that there are over two thousand patents In this country covering the manufacture of d paper. Tall Kncllahmsa. The English professional classel are the tallest of adult males, attaining the average height of five feet nine and luches. Taken right through, the English and American races are approximately of the same height Mont European nations average, for the adult male, five feet six inches; but the Austrians, Spaniards and Portuguese just fall short of this standard. one-four- th , A Maaaax A ' 1 I is coming Into use in England that is made of un-- i glazed china and provided with a sort of dorsal lump for holding in the hand and has tho rubbing surface slightly undulated, not to say ridged. The atone is white and even when used on recently washed skin it soon becomes darkened, showing that it squeezes a good deal of ma--i terial from the pore A I ! ! Stans. massage atone Traa Christina. What makes you think you are a Christian? Blanche Well, last night when Fred smneked me on one oheek 1 turned to him the other. Maliel J MADE QUEER BARGAINS, SOLD HIS HEAD FOR SAKE OF SCIENCE. llaiuittchtl A(iramfa Hitnll; mrsU-la- THE HstwMB tha Vlrtiw. of lmr-W- b BIhhh-- A TralUe la Abnormal a Bad llsad. , r When he opened it however, It was found to contain two brick which had probably been substituted by some iicrsnn with ail idea of a practical joke. Dr. IVood never recovered the head for which lie hud waited so patiently, nor did he ever forgive the person who so rruclly deceived him. MILLIONS IN MARRIAGE. Cupid's Pranks Cuusidsred t'ruaa a Koval Fiuanrlul stand- - Point. Last year there were, according to tho returns of the registrar-genera- l, 2211,922 marriage in England and Walo The returns from Scotland and Ireland bring it up to a total of more than 273, IM0 for tho United Kingdom. Just consider the amount of money that must be spent in connection with and the conclu275, 1). Hi marriage sions that follow haue suggested a new contritrain of thought to a Tid-Hbutor. It mean in the first place, as many courtship What is the usual length of a courtship? That depends, like many other thing But seoking a happy medium, wo may fairly take eighteen month aa an average. Kay one half of our sweethearting couples are so situated that letter Kay writing becomes a necessity. they correspond with each other only once a fortnight ;a circulation which must be far below the mark); put them on the moderate allowance r, of no more than two sheets of and we shall aee the dainty collection of sweet nothings amounting in the mass to a postal revenue of 1295, (KH) and a yearly stationer's bill of tioo.imu But those are very small Items to think about The jewelor will coma in for a heavier share of the profit There will be 276, out) wedding rings at a guinea apiece, and engagement rings which shall be well within tha line in assessing at the same price.. Then there are the presents which the lover will naturally bestow upon the lady of bis choice, ranging from tho bracelet of the duke to the shilling brooch of the coster. If we put them down with the rings at a guinea In each case and credit them to the jeweler again we shall have an account of nearly jl,lX)il,U90. Then come the railway companies They must surely reap a goldeu With harvest out of the courting. tne Inevitableftripa and traveling of separated sweethearts to see ono another, we mar safely strike an average of $16 for each courtship, which will give us a round sum of per-lietrati- Tbs Weight of a round. The act of parliament of June, 1834. in fixing the weight of tho imperial pouud stated that a cubic Inch of distilled water, weighed in the air by brass weights at a temperature of GO degrees fahrouheit and barometer lneho should oquul at thirty-tw- o The same act fixed 202,434 grain interest traordinary iound at 6,700 the standard A novel plan ha been troy adopted of making a bargain with a person grains and the avoirdupois pound at suffering with some extraordinary 7,000 such grains troy. At the same affliction, which binds him to liars time the gallon was made to equal delivered to the surgeons at death tea pounds avoirdupois of distilled either tho entire body or such part prater; the capacity of the imperial of it as may be specified in tho con- gallon thus became 277,274 cuhlo tract, and which is likely to prove inches, representing 70.00J grain of peculiar value from a surgical A cubic foot of water waa reckoned to weigh 2.321 jiouuds avoirdupois standpoint These contracts are regularly About All It's drawn up, signed and witnessed, and Mr. Xewrich Laud sake Mandy, would probably hold as well in law you got on so many knives and as a contract lor tho future delivery what forks at each plate fur? of a parcel of real estate, although Mr Xewrich Im sure I don't no case In which litigation has but thats the way that new know, for arisen breach of contract on man fixed em. I sposo likely ita either side has yet boon made public. show weve got 'em. to jus There can he no question that the bargain is a beneficial one to both DERIVATION OF NAMES. parties The sufferer, if he he in Chandler was once a candle maker. needy circumstances, is assured a decent burial. Tha physician, from Payne. Paine, and the like, are a wide range of subject is free to of Pagan. choose such as promise interesting Croker and Crocker had fathers who and profitable result Persons made earthen war whose bodies have been thus conKtot was formerly a herd, hence the tracted for are known among docand Stoddard tors as healthy cadaver a para- Stutlaril Miller, Milinan, Mill Milner, doxical and somewhat disrespectful ail have the same derivation. term, but sufficiently explanat ry. Calvert was once a ca.f herd; so alao In transactions of this sort every detail Is conducted with perfect deli- were the Calverd Coverts and cacy. If the patient is suffering from some Incurable disease, from Bark, Barker and Barkley show the the effects of which the physicians importance of tan lurk in early Enghave made up their minds that he lish time must die in a given time, the news Crook, Crump, Cramp and Crimp are is gently broken to his friend a hut cha'iges rang on an old nickname contract is drawn and signed and for a cripple. the patient pursues the even tenor latiens were overshoe hence the of his way. in blissful ignorance that Patton Patten ur Putners I760.00IL l'aton his days are numbered or that a and Putnam But all those are ony prelimiprice has been set on his body. The greatest expenditure Sandur Saunders, Sanderson, are naries If he has no relatives or friends, vanationa of Alexander, a favorite will come with tho wedding day. he is delicately approached by the name in Mcolland. The 10 Is the trousseau, more or less physician and the facts are revealed Clark was the penman and costly, according to circumstunoe with all possible consideration, lie the father of a village line who spell for the bride,' and at least a new long Is made to understand that death Is suit for the bridegroom. It can be one name in many way sure to come after a certain ieriod their done cheaply enough, goodness Black, Green, Brown, White, Gray, and a round sum is offered. If he be Reed know when bridal dresses can he few more or a Ruddle and Red, at all reasonable and open to conin peculiarities of dress or bought second band and top hats are viction, he will Invariably accept the originated But obtained on the hire system. complexion. money and sign the contract most folks like to do a wedding to Jone Jenkin Johnson, Jennlng Of course It is not always certain the best of their ability, and In tha Littlejohn, Mickle-johthat the patient will die before the Jack Jackson, at any and others are the upper and middle classes, physician, and this fact has led to sons ofJaynes John.many rate, the tailors share of the profits plain some rather curiou consequence ia a large on Taking only the Strong, Long, Short, Biggs, Little, moderate sum of $26 In each case One patient at Bollevue hospital, who has been there longer than any Lowe, Small, Slight, Fait, Stout, will give us a total of nearly uoa other, has reaped quite an income Young, Light and Heavy were all from reieated sales of his head. It given aa nickname Then there are wedding cakea and seems to be a part of the ethios of Reckon these marriage breakfast CUT-OF- F Dl ALOOUES. this peculiar bargaining that in expenses of social entertainment at ease the patient survives the surTramp Madam, 1 waa not always only $10 a head, and we get another fee geon, he shall be at Uberty to enter thus 276,000 No. It was your $500,000; Madam wedding into another contract other arm you had in a sling this licenses and clergyman's charges will amount to above $600,000, and as This Bellevue patient's name Is morning. Mike Kelly. He is a small man, Mistreat So you are going to leave many half crowns to pew openers about 65 years old, and suffers from my service? Now, what motive im- will foot up to $160,0')0, while the six tumors on the right side of the pels you to go away? Servant It's livery atablemana bill, allowing only one carriage to every wedding, will face. Mr. Kelly Attracted the atten- no motive, msdame: it's a soldier. mor tion of Professor John K. Wood, of Mr. Watts I wonder If a woman make $.1i)0,000 the hospital, who had made Finishing up the honeymoon wa ever does get too old to marry? Mrs. hall find anothor tolerable sum to specialty of tumor and the pro- Watts That's pretty hard to answer. added to the costs of matrimony. be fessor was often observed eyeing the does not always bring wisdom. A careful Here there will surely be diversity examination Age tumor There a Nowitull goes young artist showed that they were incurable, every stage between the make his mark some day. enough; favorites of fortune who may flit and that an attempt to remove them who will He'd lielter Growler now; he through Europe for a might result fatally. his name so anybody oan luxuriantly can't sign year and the daily laborer whose Finally the professor, whose desire icad it idea of bliss is limited to a day off. to possess the tumors increased, Your husba'd is so magnetic a If we accept $25 as a reasonable made an agreement by which Kelly, 1 know the visitor. it," average of so many honeymoon we in consideration of a certain sum, mail.'' said the I fon ml a steel have a final sum of $l,260,0Ui) wife. to was to allow his head, after death, to rtuponde.l hairpin sticking in his coat collar the carry on our account be deliveaed over for examination Tliu without speaking of furniDr. Wood exhibited Koely as a cur- other day." could He think But don't and other preparations for marture you you a had which in he iosity proprietary Interest, and proudly related to hia learn to love ine? She It might ried life and confining our calculafellow physicians how he had secured s rre, like Greek and Latin at the tions to the expenses of courtship the tumors all for his own use after college not for use, but for mental and the honeymoon, we ahall he withI'll think of it in the mark in saying that the annuMr. Kellys demise. Soon afterward rxmtise. The Poet Did you receive those al marriage census of the United the doctor diod. Mr. Kelly then contracted with an- verses I sent you last week? The Kingdom ropresonts a total expendiother physician in the hospital (or Editor I did 1 haven't received ture of $85,011(1,(100 a consideration No; but which would certainly Indicate that This anything for them yet" the disposal of his. head. la by no moans a bad thing pledge, like the previous one, was you will. The court will not convene marriage for trad dissolved by the doath of the physi- until next week." Di you take the daily paper?" cian, and Mr. Kelly smiled softly. Artificial let harfhesa. At last accounts he had made another asked the newly installed janitor of A successful system of producing No," replied the apartment house. contrast, and except for the tumor was in the enjoymont of perfect the lady to whom' he was talking, artificial Ice surfaces has been inwe subscribe for It, hut the people augurated in Paris, and available in health. large areas at all seasons of the year. In the museum of Bollevue hospital in the next flat tuke it She You mustn't try to kiss me at As explained, tba machinery consists are a numbor of specimens taken which the the station, for there are so many of two ammonia ice machines, driven from healthy cadaver power steam enby two fifty-horHe, protesting! late Professor Wood regarded as val- people there. uable in showing the progress made But everyone will think we are gines; this ice apparatus has pumps which force ammonlacal gas into by modern surgery. One which at- lirother and sister. She And we will water-coole- d condensers, liquefying tracts particular attention. Is that be, too, if you attempt it which passes into large "Was his injury accidental? asked tho ga representing a reproduction of a jawit expands with the bone after removal of the inferior the X'ew York man. Not exactly,, reservoirs, whore of cold, the same gat bebo seen production can The maxilla jawbone rrplii'd the man from Brooklyn. In the skull of tho patient, who was "What do you mean T' "Woll, you ing pumped hack and used continurathor a good looking woman accord- might say it waa in the natural ously. in the application of this sya formation of a. skating Khe had course of event lie waa ran nvor torn lor the ing to her photograph. j surface, a rink has been constructed match a in been employed factory by a trolley ear. I sixty by ISO feet, having a floor of and had contracted necrosis of the Dam a mighty good thing far a j cork awl cement, upon this being bone of the lower jaw from the niggali to hall a hopeful an' sangwine laid tlireo miles of connected iron fumes of phosphoru iuhalod while ilispn tion, saya Uncle Moae, but ' at work. She lived for some years w'en it cits sich a holt on heem dat he pipe; through this pipo circulates a with the substitute jawbone, and at Ij'icebc hr kin git a lihbin' by wa lin' solution of chloride of calcium, an death, as a token of gratitude to for it he is got a little too s ingwinit" uncun goal able liquid, inwhich, by the refrigpassage through spirals Professor Wood, she bequeathed her for to lie my good." reservoirs, is cooled to some erating head to him for scientific purpose I know exactly the character of live to twenty degrees below zura Professor Wood once entered Into am abont to innrry." How The water over the pipe is thus kept a contract with the guardians of a the lady Ifind it out?" "Why, I too frozen,' and daily sweeping and flood-- ; lunatic on Blackwells island, known did you letters her to as expert in ing insure smoothness of one was who as The Admiral. suffering Wasn't that rather from a peculiarly fascinating disease. handwriting." Oh, no; I didn't give ('sum and ElSirt It was stipulated that, for a certain indiscreet'.1" a but the him Don't original, copy." Admiral May The you think that Miss of on the death sum, What's the price of an accident Golightly is jierfectly charming? his head was to be doll vr red to the Mamma It struck me that she was physicir.n, vThe Admiral died and ticket?" asked the traveler. "Well," If a little bit giddy. Dr. Wood sent a messenger to secure replied the ngent thoughtfully, May Why. mamma, she moves in tue prize. The messenger foiled to you lake the lust section of the train best circle report to Dr. Wood, but delivered we can make you out one for a quar- theMsinma That accounts for it the can to another physician in the ter. If you propose to ride in the last will make anyone in circles Dr. we section first the of nr Moving of error. don't his want Hearing hospital. giddy. Wood sent fur the ran and got it you at all " The science of surgery is at present largely directed toward discovering the nature of aonormal growth unusual diseases ami deformities The directors at the hospitals keep keen lookout for cases which seem likely to develop something of ex- it note-pape- Mil-war- d, Cal-van- la . n, $3,-oo- o, n se I I |