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Flesherton Advance, 21 Apr 1904, p. 7

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A WOMAN'S LOVE J^ OR, A BROTHER'S PROHISE «»•• wWW999999W9^'^Jk CHAPTER XVI. Even at that late season of tho year â€" ii was December, though not advanced beyond a few days â€" the gar^deu at Caldera was rich in color And the Don AujB^stin's face clouded. He savr the fair island slip from Mad- dalena's hands into those of task- masters OS harsh as Hispaniola. Some such thought flashed into the Queen's mind, too, but her eyes Smith ! Rank, flat, ineiTective, osten- tatious lying.) "X will .try loy best, «ir,". said Uaddulena nimply, and she bowed bia leavd to tile Orajige King. He turned away, and then ho turn- ed bock. 'A moment, madame. I must beg your pardon, as I must beg hers. Just before 1 left Liverpool, a friend of yours called at my olllco and de- manded â€" there is no other word for it â€" demanded a passage to Palmetto. She would not be denied. She would see you. She is waiting now in your reception room." "She ! I know no she. Who is it?" "Miss Judith Frere â€" Adios, ma- dame." and profuse in greenery. And tho|,^gre on the Orange kings face, and weather was so fair and warm, there g^e saw nothing there but uncon- were such balmy breaths from â- "•- the sea and soft airs from the hills, such sweet mornings of sunshine and such mellow afternoons, that the little household of the Queen spent but short indoors. The Queen herself loved the open after the tedious years of mephitic Bloomsbury (where as Todman says, "there is more 'bury' than 'bloom' "); she loved to gaze at the rugged outline of the hills, to watch the tides of tinted shadow that flowed over them as the sun swung up and then down; she loved to drink in the mere sense of freedom that lives in a wide pros- pect, and to feel the cool, pure breath of her own land. Near the foot of the garden' was an arbour of Glorie de Dijon roses, and there Maddalena passed most of her waking hours, the fairest rose of her pleasaunce. At a tiny table she transacted much State business with Don Augustin; received mes- sengers with lists of dead and wounded, or of the siege of Palm City; gave a ready ear to this or that petitioner who believed that the Queen could set all things right; or signed documents signifying to Don A. that her Majesty desired to ilo such and such, to Senor Q. that ner Majesty commanded him to do ns he had been bid on pain of her displeasure. To every one that saw thus thron- ed among the roses the same thought came â€" that the Queen was very beautiful; that she was young, that she was indeed a Queen, but alas ! that she looked so sad. Not that she did not smilo on her people, rimg eern and Eunuscment. "Palm City," went on Mr. Smith, "will surrender. It cannot resist attack by twelve battleships and gunboats and torpedo destroyers." "But if we could take it first," cried Bravo. "It would bo at too (?reat expense my friend," said Mr. Smith drily. "There is a much cheaper way than that." â- 'Aud that is 7" "I am here this morning to Iny my plan before your Majesty. May I explain it in my own way ?" "Surely, sir. surely." "The moment my apent at Rio cabled to me that the fleet had set out, I started for Palmetto. 1 cal- culate that the ships will be olT Palm City on the morning of tlie day after to-morrow, or perhajis in the evening. Perhaps tlioy will come in at nicrht with lights out, and mako my friend Stampa rub his eyes when he wakes in the morning. Anyway, and whatever the inten- tions of tho Free States admiral, T want you to allow me to intercept him before he sights Palmetto." "Yes, yes," cried Maddalena, all impatience. "I wont you, madame, to entrust me with a letter lor him, in which you explain your position. Ask for his co-operation, and promise pay- ment for his a.ssistance â€" rather tlio assistance of his governments. Good. He will accept or he will reject. If he rejects, he will win â€" temporarily: for Europe will not allow the Free States of South America to depart unless you prejvjr to he^my prisoner, and I am going to take caro of you until you are hmUm well acain. U, will bo time enough tlien to speak of goiDf?. CoBM now, take my arm." "But, madame " "My word is law hero â€" take my arm (" In a little while Maddalena re- turned to her arbor, and sat down with pen and paper to writo her let^ icr to tho Admiral of the Free States fleet. For an hour or more hho labored, tearing up draft after draft, and stopping every now and then to lean her chin on her hand and gather her thoughts afresh. She had promitied Mr. Smith that she would try, and she was trying: but for she was happy in seeing them; i from their adherence to the Monroe doctrine, and if the worst conges to tho worst Palmetto is still Hispan- iola's, and the struggle goes on from where it now stands. If he accepts, ,vou will have to pay a million, [icr- haps two. And you can leave that to me." Maddalena rose to her feet, carried out of herself by tho suggested speedy end of the fight, her face flushed and her hands pressed to- gether. "O ! if it might only be ! If it might only be !" "It may well be, madame. If you write the letter I spoke of^and â€" " but over the smile flitted a shadow of sorrow indefinable that made the emile strangely sweeter, and in her voice was a subtle tone that found in every heart a responsive chord, and made the hearer wonder if it was in such wise the angels sang when Paradise was lost. "Ah !" said they, "she will be no longer sad when the Hispaniolan is driven out of Palmetto â€" she will sing and dance with the best of us then." Only Don Augustin knew that whatever good hap came to the Isle of Palms this silver thread of sorrow would string Haddalcna's jewels for ever. ITie change in her did not escape ho paused and laughed â€" "make it a King as he came down the path es- corted by Don Augustin, radiant with delight. To Bravo the return of Thomas Smith seemed an augury that the happy end was near. Maddalena rose with outstretched hands. "Mr. Smith ! You have taken us by surprise !" "Bettor I than Stampa, your Ma- jesty," he laughed. "The fact is I couldn't stay .away any longer. I want to see for myself if my orange monopoly is to hold good." "Ah ! you put it in that way. Well â€" you shall see, you shall see. But ' come : I am just going to breakfast under tho roses. You must join me." "I have already breakfasted, ma- dame." "At eight o'clock ?" ' "Y'es." "Off bacon and eggs ?" "Yes." "â- What a Briton !" she laughed. "But if .you have come from Espole- to â€" have you ?" "From Espoleto, madame." "Then you are ready for luncheon. Com.e, sit down, sir. You will join us, Don Augustin." She turned swiftly and looked at him. Bravo aghast and a little more than half inclined to pose nughtily on dignity. But the good humor and good faith so cleurly nuirivcd on the Orange King's face disarmed her and mado her !, ii , itc coui auiiu city of the proposal. "Sir," she said, "I will do It. You are a deus ex muchina. " "My Latin is rusty, mndnmc," be laughed, "but â€" dea in flores seeuis to meet the case." ^ "You are a courtier as well as a genius, sir." ..^ "11 the admiral agrees to your proposal, madame, _in four t!;'.ys there won't be a Hispaniolau .sold- ier on tho island." . "There arc eight thousuntl here now," grumbled Bravo. "How do you propose to get rid of them ? Dump them in the sea ?" '*Send them back to His;>;iuiola," said Smith shortly. "In balloons? There are no .ships." "There will be ships when they arc wonted," came "the niiswer, still more shortly. "I .see you have your plan, Mr. Smith," said lladdaleuu, with a You will 'Y'ou are cut oft from the world , here, madame, so I daresay I am [ frown at^ Don Augustin the first to bring you a certain piece i *•?" ""o ?" of news-good news. The Free State ^taMh waved a hand of rosignn- havo thrashed Hispaniola." 'â- 'o" to the inevitable. "That is indeed good news. When? "^ plan 7 A very little one. „„ 9<> ' ! Like the Free States, I also have How ? "When ? Twelve days ago. And how ? By blowing them out of the water. But there is better news to eome." A men-y twinkle lurked in the corner of the Orange King's eye, as ho paused and helped himself to olives. "What do you think, mad- ame, of the Free States' combined navies crossing the ocean to bom- bard the principal ports of Hispan- iola ?" "Is it possible?" cried Maddalena, while Don Augustin, startled afresh out of his precisian calm, stared at Mr. Smith with a hundred eyes and a gaping mouth. "Does it not make your prospects brighter, madame ?" "It will certainly lower Hispnnio- la's prestige." "More than that, madame, more than that." And again Mr. Smith paused with that twinkle. "Tell me, tell mo," cried Maddal- ena . "Well, as far as their knowledge goes, the commanders of tho Free States fleet regard Palmetto as His- paniolan territory. On their way to blockade. bombard, pulvoriy.c Sarralonn. 'I>erc7., Almeduna, Pam- parivos, Ihcy will naturally call at P(xlrx City and domond ita surren- n fleet. Twelve steamoi's of n)iiie arc now throe days north of Palmetto. They are ostensibly bound for tho West Coast of Africa for ciirgo. They were under-coaled at Liverpool. They put into I'ulm City for suppH'^s. I'm no man of business if they i-ouch the West Coast this trip. 1 rutlicr think they will touch at lliKpaniolau ports and land more valuable carijo than rubber. Hispnniolo. will pay â€" and I'll see that 1 get uiy wonc.v. too. And now, madume, ,you will want a little time to write .your let- ter. Do you permit uie to leave you? I should like to sou Crant, if Don Augustin will direct me where to find him." .â- \s he uttered Hector's naii;e. Mr. Thomas Smith gave one swift side ginnco at Maddalena, and satLsliud his suspicion. "I should like to help •y«..i. Mr. Smith. I do not kn«w what to say." "Madame. 1 cannot lirl|) you in this. Write as your 'neart. dictates. I should make it (.of> liiisines.slike, nBd the admiral would scentâ€" diplom- ocy. Writo as your heart dictates. madame : sincerity and candor will win. No. no. I cannot help â€" 1 ha\o no heart." tC Mr. Smilli : O. ^ir Tl'.omas I somehow the words would not come "Don Augustin I Accompany Mr. right. And although she knew the Smith. kv.A see that Miss Frero | importance of gettiuj; it done, she is sent to mo ut once." -could not bind her thoughts down; Judith Krero ! I'oi.r .luflith Frero! [in spite of her will they Wf ndered What, ij'.ndcap freak is this that has from the garden, from her people, entered your head 7 What has from this task, to a tent in the driven .vou to FuUnotto. to sit in lines before Palm City, to Hector, her Majesty's reception-room twining KnA as thought gave place to vision your firtrers and goiiii; over and over sorrow lifted from her face, and in airain sad little set sppeclies. while every featuro her soul lived and your heart t)eats in your shrunken moved in sunshine. Tho fear and breast such a piteous rhythm, and dread of to-morrow and to-morrow your breath tonics and t;oi!H with and all the to-morrows was thrust such a tiainful, dry crsicUle. and with away, and thu almost insupportable, such accusin,r iti>r>itcoii lluTo sounds thronging jovs of to-day remained , .,_ . . , „ „„ ««^ »« in your ears tl-.e cry , on have h<.„ra ,o wl isper tho impossible and make ^^l d'TermK m degree, as we fi«d to nothin.; else 1 eside tli.s,. many days it true for one monent into which !i"ehor anunals, each order of We 1 IlSTELLI&EliCE Of FISHM WISDOM OF THE Z-OWEH AMnrALS. SBA Interesting Exampiaa â€" Feeding Captive Fish â€" Migrate Like Birds. In the New Yark Aquarium tlje other day, L. B. Spuncor, one ol Uia best, known of tho attendants, w«a discussing the remarkable intelligmoe exhibited by fish. "The more i know abotit fishes,"' said Mr. Spencer, "and the longer I study them, the more respect I have for them. They know a great deal mora than you'd have any. idea they do. "I made this remark to a friend ol minu not long ago and he said: "Oh, no! You moan, don't you, that the mor» you know about human nature tho more respect you have for fishee?" "But what I mean was that there is a remarkable amount of intelligeBca in fishes, even in the lowest orders of sea life. In sea-anemones and oerala, for example â€" you see specimeBS ol them in the balanced aquaria over there. It is the same inteiligeace â€" the cry of '"you sold \wv. you sold eternities were crushed. There is her?" 'What has i' riven- you here â€" something of motlier-love in wom- nay, what has drawn you? â-  aii's purest passion. Perhaps it You reii emlier that day in, .\ber- was this side that was uppermost in (ceti wlu'n TTcctor Crant told you of ^faddalena as she saw Hector with the hapless ymmg Quciti. "You re- his arm in a sling, and that prompt- mem^pr th:it nvonin;^ wl'f'i 1)<> took cd I'.er, in her ecstasy of vision, to you intohei- preKonce. and you feast- stretch out her hand ond open her ed your stjirved o.ye? on lifr young lips in inaudible speech, lieioity. and you drank the new wine , .Sbe let her head fall on the of her hopeful hoart. and you saw in j tabh». The vision was gone: real- her the self your dreams of long upfo i jty i-eniained â€" reality, great and had nia(!o of you. You remember powerful and hard, but not too hard how first you loved her. and then for tho spirit that moved Maddalena how you cnviiv! ber. .'Vnd then, i Sho seized her pen and wrote fur- :ilus ! you n-imin'ierâ€" iini! it bi-in(,'S | iou,-.!y and with a full hoart. Words a hot flusli to your wnslfd checl<.sâ€" she did not consider or choose: it how povoify pinched and the iievil | x(.;,.s her very thought she set down, drove, and you_fl.! ;i>ni;'ted to soil ! And with' .sontcthitii- Mglu-r than her secretâ€" tho secret of her who in n!er<> piide. soii.ethirif: stronger than all innocence, ai!?i i liXUc periiaps mero â-  power, sho signed her name- out of her tmconsr-iously growing j •'Miuidalenn-. thn ' ueen." Jove for Hector, rccoivod you and i M'hpn the Orange King returned, confided her dear hopes to you. : ar.d llio missive was put into his Yes, you tried to •.•11 her. and you ; haufi, ho niado no excuse for reading failed. You tried to betray. an<\ you it. i r«i did not snnle as ho finished, wore betrayed. If y..ur borgtsin hud but. with sonu-.thijis; of reverence in been succcs.sfully cairind out, would hi.s air, ho folded the paner ere ho you be in Palmetto this sunny Pe- placed it in his lettt-r-ciuse, and turn- cemher morninfj, dosiroug of one o<l to her with a look which told havinir that degree adapted to its special needs. "Now look at these sea-onemones/ They arc taken from the ocean, m matter where, placed in the aquariuni and fed by hand â€" in other worde, artiticially. In a state of captive ity they must rolv for their food up> on man. who passes down to them a bit of clam or oyster on the point <A a stick. When the food is first offer- ed to them in this tuuisunl way tJi» anemones show fear, for in their nat' oral habitat they are not accustomed to dead objects; to them this combi- nation of stick and dead clam ii truly alarminir. But they soon get used to it. After a little the touch of tho stick upon the tcnaclos doee not make them withdraw ond cio8« up the fower-liko mouth. That touch now means food and the anemooa reaches out pnctprly toward it." FEEPTNfi t)F FISHES." "The mo''pnipnts and actions of tiiie lower orders of life are mainly a matter of food Animals take great rislcs at the promptings of hunger. So will men, for that matter, as 1 know from mv o.xj)erience in the civil In regard to their feeding, we ob- serve mnnv interesting things about thingâ€" confession : confession with- ])on Auirustin that the Urance King out a single thousrht of forgivenessâ€" had found a teacher in Maddalena. to scP her and tell her allâ€" yes, that i ijut he laui^hod when he spoke. in itself will he forijiveiii'ss enough, i "^Jy monopoly is as sure, mad- puni.shment enough: for to yTize in- ! ai:,p, ' as that Paluictto is yours." j „ , , , , •. i^_ to her truthful e\es and ^ee re-; "Then " fisb-P Toko «)..• »n1mon famJ.y. for proach look out at you-tiut will; -Tliis"â€" ho tapiHjd his pocket- l^'amplp. Thev ir..Tiera!ly are fed with he forgiveness. Only you shall nev- â-  "caries the day. All t!-.o rest is Mive killies. Vhon some of those are or sec reproach in i\*>L(Ida)ena's e- es. detail. 1 (x my tru.st iti in.stiiict." Ithrown into the tank tho salmon at You think you sho-il. -b'lt .vou shall That evening Mr. Thomas Smith onco dart after them. The first move not. That is Iwcuuii© you do not put out from !• stuile'.o in the Cover- ,thp UiUie makps for safety is. to swim know all tho fineness and Lender- „or oi Lasos, and circling tho wost-'.'ip to the t-^n of the tank, where he honrledness aud Xho rare ' wi>manly . ^.m end of i'ahnetti Ktl•llc!^ s..uth to hugs the back wol! as close as he can. understanding of. tho Qui-eii. She intercept tho admiral of the Free 'Prpsentlv Vr. Sal»?ion spies him there will not even ofr«r> you ,fori'I\oii.?v3 ; States. Ftaboralo c.-ilculati ns had and in^kps ••pnd^ for o -^rive. But be- for to offer for^ivoiu-ss impl<;s that !,een mado to .settle the fleet's fore ho nvirhps tho wall he stops, and there has been a faultâ€" and Knowing course, and Mr. Smith n!ci<oned ouvou can irmr^m' him saving to him- by instinct how you havn K>i'"'c:ed, [siting in with the vaimuord cruiser spif- 'I've nin into that wall before sho will not se.;!* ti> break the hn.'is- about 'mid-afternoon of tfie ne.xt ^„(i hu-t inv snout, and vou can hot ed reed. Yet be stronjr, Judith fj„v. Hut wbon night fell tl-ere rose Ivour life I'm not going te do it Frere. for her very kindness will cut o„t of the southern waters, iust on „„,-„ â-  deeppr thatt n thniKSaud reproaeliKS. ;he hori:con, four new st ars, and , "..on the side the killies Show a -Her Majesty desires Miss Judith ,i,„, four more, and four ni.>re, and;„„„rt rtpoi of sense. Thev will Jump Ti-reres prosence. umr more, ut.tjl from the bridge ofi^,,' . v,„-,„'. Like a ^host in a dream she fvl- ii,(, Uoverror of 1.4icefi tho Orange ^ ^ " lows the tall servant. l.ii;e a o host Ki-ig counted cIofo on .seventy wiiito in a dream she walk.s down tho pur- . n,„(jt.-heod liirhts. bi<' ajul little, den path and sees the Quwn stand -..vil.h onu prout solitnrv red light . ... „„„„, „ fl„„ ,._ aerhatis under tho arrh of ro<a>s A iii;-;t , j »i â-  • i> e ,\ i ^- "p* wit'i never a nop ler pernaps uuati vnc iiK.n oi i o..<.k. ,v iu..^i ;ii)otit the mir vne of the column. For ,, . clouds her si^'ht : sb.o stV.mWes and ,,,ij, ^erl strr, with all his own lamps ''"" "" ""'""• falls. The servant stoops to a.ssi.st ciirofuDv dnritened, Ihn <trun.;o King i MTHf! AI'i'tRY FISH. her. but nraddnlona ruiis ligiitly st.^red.' To avoid the vaui'uard ho wnv «u toi» of tJie wire str.->in'"- nt tho back el the t^mk .ind »t!i" there, ha'f a dozen •* thcea, t.^'l to snout. n<» clofie as thov can along tho pulh, aud has tho poor ^y^^aa first a woman in hor a:-ui.s. ond is lifting I'.or gciitl.y, hefoio the man is well into tho middle of his amn/e "You may go. I will attend to this lady inyself." >fe hears, but iiiHrors. "Y'ou may go." I-Tor look is suiiicicnt order. .Judith Ficro ii sot down in a. low chair, and aNsjjlu.ss of wiue is held- to her lips. S!-e is slow ol" recov- , , I Ti. TV. Nvsa. who looks after the s.vet>p on «-ord B>'d . • , „ouarium, says v,e.stward. and t'.en lay still m the '^ ^ T-m'i " ' Krforl3>., trou^h of the Atlantic until the rod '^â- "•" " " ""r ^•"^- oIhT tko o3 light was iad=.<-d to 10 distant b.it a ♦" "voments o, fish in tUo ocoan r.'iUi or so. T!;yn it was full ii'-ead into tho darkness o right. (To be Continued). ELECTRIC WARFARE. The ?Ianv Uses to Which. 7:!ectri- ' "'"' snecd r""' those of birr's on land, t 'the ""'^itrrntorv fsh." he savs, "come iinrth in the .â- Â»;>fing in great shoals. A 'â- lev nrri'-'n- hmy? thev pair olT and scatter abo'it in bays, criwks end pat-nWes. «-hern thov stav during the )>n>e''-n'' st">.son. Vrhen the fall aj>- h"S the'" n.ssi-'Tihlo again and ii"o''P' southward in larcro shonle, just ins tho'- rn"'e. V'hen n'igrnting. birds u[iiJ '.[â- (•inlbf fv hi'"h. poinini; lower when BE CHEERFUL. Keep to the broad highways ol tu orv. but at last 'sho opens tier e.'.os. , .. . ,t -n ^ Ami then tho sad little .M't spcec.Hos i ' '^^^ isJTow Put. ir.o cast to the winds, all for-roiten. ! An iii;i>rostiH<; in^taiiro of t) and from tho he.nrt of lior reiuorso extension of tho i;so of electricity is it hl-ws hard. Tn cslin weather mi- tliore wells up an unproineditated furni.sl'ed bv it.*? use in wurfai'e. A i^jrotlt-r fsh swim near tho surface, bahbto of confession, coutntion. ,,,„, ^.p.jj.^ .,j,„ electric light was in-ivit v>hon it is rough and stormy thsy abasci'icnt, that lladdalonn is pow- t.od.icod to add to tho comfort of the igwim deeivr." erJcss to stop and that is ten tni-os .,.1^0.18 and to provide better il- moro oloquent bcci^u.sc of , s very „„,,i^,;,,io„ „f ^,„, ,,,,rks. Flecric incoheivnco. Its utter al)a.,donmenL , ^^^ From a word hcic and a word there ... , r ^ ^â- , â-  Maddalena pieces to^ctb-.r t.V,e piti- '^ "-' q<^a>'tors more comfortable in ful wiiolo. and sees how this worn- '"«• ^veathcr and electric motors have au's indcpoiidonco, "a poor i.Ofcses- ''"'â- "" adopted for tr.uiMiig the K"ns, a â-  ^ ^ , , ..^ _. Kion, but her nil." went dov.y bo- c'n-"^'' "f work for whi.ch they are par- hope and cheertulness. t^xpect fore tho combined forces of poverty tici.Marly w<-|l o.lnptod. Searchlights auccowl. Think sucross and you wlil end temptation. Thoro i.s one (.1110- h:'"^"'^ '"'''» installod. eiiobling a foiti- sucti>o{l. Keep oat of the back aiU?y« tion only stirring in her broaKl â€" not Ticalion to swe<?p tlic sen nt night, of gloom and in^ssiinism. Join th« aitircr or reproucli or contein-.t. but 'Hie various posts of tho fortress procession of the cheerful, tho wit- pity, the pity that luidorstnn' s are connt'Ctca' top>ther by telephone, ling, and tho hoi>eful. Bo snngiiiac. !weaki;o!;s and' gi> es sttonglh and so that the commandfl-il is in touch Kiiow the pleasures of living. Knjo.l i comfort. It shines fro.'ii her eyes at all tiu'es with tho entire p'nrri.son, tho sunshine of hope. Keep awaj j ond her face and her whole being, nnd can instantly tranimiit orders to from tho scavengers ar.d ragpicker) land sn.ying nothing (for words arc uny point. The fortiiicat io is nlonr who infest the back alleys of lifa 1 poor thinr{S after all) sho says the con.st arc linked by telephone and Your iH-fsiniist is your scavcngpr ' inoro to tho tortured woman than a lolegraph. so that, on thi> npiH-nrancn your ragpicker. Ho may be a n««s j thousantl speeches could. ;„f the enemy at nnv jioint. all the snry evil, but too much of him ii I But tho .sitonco must he broken. fr„.u-!c[ytions would bo informed of it. fatal He never gave the world t |Ono cannot aJw.iys hold foveied ,.^„ijnmrino-infne.s ore controlled smilo. He never contributed to th , hands and pat them and smoot>h ^^jj^tpj^.^iij,. „„(, ^ven the gims may good cheer of any human being. Hi I them consolingly. \y^ f;^^, ^v this means by an officer at 'never lifted the gloom from any dis "Poor Miss Frei-e! ,,'somo dist mt point. Bv means of Itresned soul. He is the worm which 1 "O I madame. O ! your lAlnicPty. .„ir,,,,.ss telegraphy n fortification can iin the evolution of life, is continual i You are very weak after .your ,^^, ^^^^^ ,^ ^^,,^.,; ,vith the scouting ly dragging backward towartte tU long long journey. ^ that ^'^'^â- '"^''' ""'' would bo informed of the p««rt . resisting the progress of di ' " ""â-  ; ui'Pi-oneh of tho em-my long before vploimiont which must go on with ot "Hut you forgive Bic !"^"N!)v!^f*^ow^"Vhere is nothing to !•«;' '^;';'^''':/'-^'" ^'^'l. "^"''l' f^^^ ^'r, t.T ; forgive. And I don't understand aicH- lights tho , auij^M.nder station..: cronchtnents oJ the Beware ot tho en- carping. pc8.simi.<»- forgive. .\in\ 1 don t unuorstana a. â€" - •â- :^- â- â- â€¢ -â- â€¢â€¢ •â€" -^^ ••â- â- â- â€¢ .â€" • -• -• - - , . j,^^ ,' , ,. word you .say. Lon« ago in ].„n- and electric-clock circuits furnish oc- ^ tic spirit. It m » hondy pW. It don I'nuido you promise to visit wci'''"-'^"- t*"'^- ''^ "" VM\9 of the lortl- 1 takes root easilr ,n tie biimI, and. in rnlmetto You have come; you Hcotioiw. like tho thistle, when oacc it jrnms a foothold it is wcU-iiisrh iBiiiio."»slblo has to mroot it; but it cannot U»c in an .iro my very welcome guest. â- O. T cannot str>- â€" T cannot stay." "T dtvn t Umm whMher she "O. but you shall stu.v. Remem- : shaken hini or promivtl to innmr .atmosphere of sunshine and choorful- !bi?r that T "nm tho Queen here, und him." "Whv?" "I'o h.ns stooiwd, noiis. rhen'forp. kc-p «• tbi> liijlh- m.v word is la\v. Vou are my guest buying extrovngnnt presents for her." .wsj.a. Keep out •f the has* .-vHi^r*. ORIGINAL ILLEGIBLE

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