Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 1 August 1895 — Page 8
NEW EVERY MORNING. Cvery day is a fresh beginning; Every morn is a word made new. You who are weary of sorrow an't sinnia g, Here is a beautiful hope for you, A hope for me and a hope for you. AU the pa.st things are past and over. The tasks aro done, and tho tears are shed. Yesterday's errors let j-esterday cover; Yesterday's wounds which smarted and bled, Are he&led with the healing which night has shed. Yesterday now is a part of forever, Bjund up in a she.it which God holds tight, With glad Ltr3, i.n 1 sa 1 days and bad days which n -vir Shall visit uj more with their bloom and their blight, Their fullness of sunshine or sorrowful night. Let them go, sines we eannot recall them, Cannot undo and cannot atone. Clod in His mercy neive. forgive tiieml Only the new days are our own. To-lay is ours and to- lay alon?. Here ar the skies all burnished brightly; Hre is the sjent earth all reborn; Here aro the tired limb springing lightly To face the sun and to sharo with the morn In tho chrism, of dew and th-3 cool of dawn. Every day i.s a fresh beginning, Listen, my soul, to tho glad refrain, And, spite of old scrrow and older sinning. And puzzle foretasted and possible, pain. Take heart with tho day and begin again! Susan Coolidgc. Leonard's Fine Youn Men.
r i mOUD man was w&yn Abel lM proud ?l house Leonard of his and every thing in it,proud able business. He had been heard to boast that he had in his concern the threo finest young men in the city. There was his own son, Charlej he was certainly a tine young man, and his father was more than a little proud of him. Then there was Evan Jones, the head bookkeeper, and thirdly a sort of head clerk and general manager, who made himself felt everywhere, and of whom even his employer was half inclined to stand in awe Walter Sterne. Sterne had many peculiar ways of his own. He owned the very respectable house he lived in, and nevertheless he was accustomed to make the fact that he supported his mother, who was also his housekeeper, an excuse for all sorts of unnecessary economies; though not only Abel Leonard, but his fellow clerks, were wel aware that Walter's bank acconut had been steadily climbing upward from the very hour, ten years ago, that he had entered the establishment. And yet Sterne was a welcome visitor at the house of his employer; for he could be entertaining in many ways. Three very fine young men were these, and undoubtedly Abel Leonard was justified in being proud of them ; but the time had come, in tho natural course of human events, when the old gentleman must necessarily be puzzled. For forty years he had had no partner in business, and fur ii ilf that time ho had accustomed himself to look upon his daughter Belle as a girl ; but now two important facts were dowly dawning upon him. One was, tnat he must speedily assign the charge of his business to younger and more active management : and the other was, that two of his very fine young men were rivalinr in well-directed effort? even a nearer connec: eh other establish with himself than that of partn r in business. Abel Leonard had always pretended to'keep a sharp eye after his books and balances, but of late years this had been little more than a pretense, until, now that he seriously contemplated a change in his arrangements, he once moro made a pratical reality of his formal examinations. Perhaps the old gentleman was not as quick at figures as he had once been, and there were some accounts that puzzled him sadly. At all events he went over them again and again. Still he called no one to his asistance, though, as Charlie was cashier, Evan Jones head bookkeeper, and it wis Walter Sterne's duty to go over things after them, he could havo very easily had everything explained. To bo sure, Walter had been absent for two or three days, just before the worst of the puzzle came. That night Leonard went home with a clouded brow, and a good deal less of pride than usual in his heavy step. There can be no doubt of it; there's a deficit in tho cash account, and it was well covered up, too ; false entries and false footings, and what not; but they could not deceive old Abel. I wonder how long this has been going on ?" And then, as somebody whispered to him, there came tho thought of Walter Sterne's comfortable bank account, so large for a young man with his salary and expenses. I hope not," said Abel. fI wonder what Belle thinks of hiraV" After dinner that evening Abel called his daughter into tho library and unfolded his terrible news. So absorbed was he that he hardly noticed Belle' sudden change of color wheu ho dimly hinted his suspicion?. 'But, father, may you not be mistaken?" No, not about the deficit." ' "Bnt who could havo tiken the mouey?" "Any two of them con I I, if Ihcy
ft-lJSrrtb elegant r&&XJ liCCniplished iffffh '-.WL tlanSbtert proud ZHHm of his lonpr-estab-Hshed and profit
worked together, or may bo one of them could have done it alone. They have chnnces every now and then, but Walter has the most." She could say little more, but the whole thing seemed impossible. "Walter will bo back to-night, said the old gentleman, "and I will say nothing about it till he has had a look at the books." The next day old Leonard sent down word that he was ill, and did not make his appearance on that day, or the day following, so that the three line young men had ii all their own way. The second evening Sterne came up to the house to make one of his frequent calls. He wus received as usual, made a good report of the business, bnt he seemed to have something heavy on his mind. What it was he did not mention in his brief interview with his employer, nor did the latter, muffled up in flannels, make any allusion to his own portcntions discovery. After t!v) talk with the old gentleman, there followed an interesting call in the parlor, and never before had Belle seemed so subdued in her manner or so sweetly engaging. To such an extent did her manner and tho halfpleading expression of her face work upon the already pretty well iormed determination of her young friend that the secret, which for a long time had been only half a secret, forced its way to his lipsiu a rush. Belle bowed her face upon her hands for a moment, and then raised it, pale as marble. ".Mr. Sterne, you must give me time for consideration. If you will call again to-morrow evening I will give you your answer.' Walter's fellow clerk was destined to receive a very similar reply to a very similar question, only that Evan was put oft' somewhat indefinitely. Still later that same evening, two very fiue young men were walking down Broadway, arra-in-arra, wheu one said to the other: Evan, I can't go to the old gentleman for rcore money just now have von any?" "Not a cent. You know how unlucky we've been of late."
"Can't you raise some?" 'Don't think I can. I've dono a good deal for you already." "Yes ; but that will be all right when you marry Belle." "Yes; you must help me, then.' 'Why don't you propose?" "I did that very thing to-night." "You don't say ! What luck V ' "Good, I should think; only she has put me off for a week." 'Oh, that's nothing. You couldn't have expected an answer oQ-haud." "Xot from so proud a girl as Belle Leonard. Still, you can help me." "I will. Don't be afraid; I'm not anxious for Sterne as a brother-in-law." "Hn, ha, don't worry about that." Au.l they separated; but the next morning, no sooner did Jones reach the store than Walter called him aside for a private consultation. Whatever was its nature, even the countenance of Walter Sterne was unable to conceal an expression of astonishment and consternation. "But why did you not tell mo at once?" he asked. "1 knew your cast-iron ways, and I was Tfraid you would tell the old gentleman, aud that wouldn't do, you know." "Tell him? Never! We must keep him ignorant at any cost." But how will we do it?" "Ob, leave that to me. I'll go over tho books at once. There won't be the slightest danger." Walter Sterno was unusually busy with his accouuts that day, and in the afternoon, late, Abel Leonard camo down in a carriage. He tumbled the books over, as usual, but had little to say, and he really looked sick when he started for home. The ride was not a long one, but it seemed to have shaken all the pride out of the fat littlo merchant. As he entered the hall ho was met by Belle. "Father?" The very worst. Belle 1" "How do yon mean?" 'The footings and entries are cor rected, and the cash is all straight again But how is that the worst?" "The corr?ctions aro all in Walter Sterne's own hand." Oh, father, isn't it terrible!" "Indeed it is. And I loved that young man almost like a sou. I'd "nave trusted him with all I was worth." And. to tell tho truth, both father and daughter wero thoroughly raiserable. Belle especially looked forward with a nervous horror to tho fast approaching hour for Walter's call. At last tho expected feet wero on the doorstap, and naver had he looked so near the ideal of a "line young man." There was even a look of pride and elation on hi face as he entered the parlor, but his countenance fell as he cast his eyes on the faco that came forward to meet him. "Miss Leonard?" "Mr. Sterne" And for a few moments neither of them could say more. Their embarrassment was, to say tho least, changed in nature by the sudden entry of Abel Leonard. "Walter Sterne, I will save Bello tho trouble of giving you her answer. Does not your own conscience tell you what it ought to be?"' "My conscience? I cannot comprehend you." "Then I will tay that I havo examined the books. I siw thorn before you made the corrections. I may also add thut I have extorte 1 an unwilling confessiou from Jones not that ho has done wrong in anything but his desire to shield you. It will not be i necessary for you to como to tho oflico t lU'IUUI l II Y. While the old gentleman had been speaking Walter had ' en thinking, and ho replied iu a htiot: voice: "Mr. Leonard, I see into what a snare I have fallen, but I see also that
I cannot at once lift myself out of it. I will only say now that I have been honest with you, and more than honest. Tbero is not one stain on my conduct." And ko saying, ho strode out of the room, leaving a deeper impression behind him than he was aware or. As for Belle, she threw herself upon a sofa in tho back parlor, and all but sobbed herself to slee p. Perhaps an hour, perhaps more.
passed by, when she was awakened by voices conversing near her in low tones in the darkness. "No, you can't, Charley ; that was the very money I let von have. I toU hi m you helped yourself to it, and he ma le it good to straighten tho books and clear you. It was only by bad luck that the old gentleman pried it out, and it's too late to help it. He'll forgive Walter in a day or so. Then, yon know, it fixes the other thing." Thus far Charley had said very little that Belle could hear, but now his voice was raised a little. "Jones, do you think Til shield myself, or you either, at the expense of a man that would d so generous a thi ng as that? No, not bv " "Hurrah for you, Charley!" almost screamed Belle.as she sprang from tho sofa and threw her arms around his neck. "f knew that Walter was not dishonest! Go and bring him back here. Never mind how late it is. Go !" By tho time she ceased speakiug there came a loud bang from the front door as it shut behind the retreating form of Evan Jones. Charley went, ns ho was bidden; and if Abel Leonard never again boasted of his "three tine young men,' he had, in after years, much to say about "my son-in-law, Mr. Sterne." The Para lis? ot Babies. Japan has been called "tho paradise of babic." In many ways it seems that the Japanese treat :l:cir children moro wisely than the more (sophisticated but really less civilized Nations of tho West. The babies are born polite. They seem to Inherit manners. There is in all Japan nothing corresponding to our eity hoodlum or to the gamin of Paris. The Japanese child, even of the poorest parents, h is plenty cf pure air, frequent new toys and the lovo and attention of both parents. As a natural restilt, when ho grows up, he treats his old parents with tho utmost filial respect. No man with children feels uneasy iu Japan because lie has no money laid up for his old age. Tho Japanese child is better tempered than the American, largely because he never has meat to eat. His food is light and simplo and his digestion unimpaired by pasty pie crusts and heavy meat. The politeness of tho Japs is strong testimony to the theory of tho vegetarians that meat eating brutalizes one. Yet that tho Japaneso who never tasted meat in their lives ara both strong and plucky the Chinese aro now well prepared to testify. Lafcadio Ilearn, after teachiug in n large Jap school for two years, says : "I have never had personal knowledge of any serious quarrel between students, nnd have never even heard of a fight between my pupils, aud I havo taught some 800 young men and boys." He had never seen "a man strike another or a woman bullied or a child slapped." Yet the Japanese, with their perfect courtesy and sunny kindness, have been from timo immemorial a Nation of warriors, always ready to avenge insults in blood. New York Recorder. Her Face an Inspiration, There is a face which I meet frequently on the street. It is not particularly a beautiful face, but it is so bright and so happy that the atmosphere always seems clearer after it has passed. Its owner is evidently a working girl, for each morning she takes a car at a certain corner, and she carries a lunch. Aud I feel liko congratulating tho firm which has captured that ray of sunshine to light up some dingy office or beam across some dreary dry goods counter at the impatient customers. I am sure she is worth her weight in gold to her employer. Her face but puts in contrast the multitude of gloomy, weary, worried, sorrow stricken countenances ono soos passing up and down tho city streets, and leads ono to wonder why thero are not moro of these exceptions. II it is possible to cultivate such a disposition as shine out through a pair of laughing eyes, there's a deal of blame attached to those people whoso faces havo tho effect of an August thunder cloud on the community, New York Press. A Beniarka'ile Snake Story. Here is a snake story from Tavarez, Fla. Tho town has bocn invaded by a qreat army of rattlesnakes. No woman or child dare venturo out of doors. The men only go out in tho daytime, and then wearing thick leather leggings reaching above tho knee, anil armed with clubs to fight the rattlers. Every dog in tho place, and not a few of tho horses aud other domostio ani mals, have been killeU by tho snakes. Fortunately, nooo of the inhabitants havo been killed, but many aro the narrow escapes they have had. It is reported that altogether 400 snakes have been killed, and their number does not seem to be at all diminished. The City Council has voted an appropriation for the extermination of the reptilo. It is not stated so in the dispatch, but it would seem that the town must have been preparing for a grand fishing excursion, anc had laid in bait by tho tank. It would be impossible othcrwiso to explain how the whole community had such a bad attack of snakes. Certainly the season has not produced another story to equal it. New Orleans Pioayum.
3I0SLER, THE ARTIST.
I IE FLOURISHED DURING THE LATE CIVIL WAR. The War rictiirc !a Harper' Weekly YVcro Anions: His Most Notable Work Has Krrently Finished a Fainting Doitlncil to Itec-tmio I 'anions. ,rT"N. N1' of tho c"nsp!o uor.s pictures in the exhibition rrÄ J lv'- i the large y'llai'!; J production in ihe north gallery entitled "Last Moments." It Is a Teath Fccno in an old European interior. The subject renders it anything but diet rf ul. yet (ho Signatur'- affixed to tho work must rend the mind ot many a visitor pleasantly back ti tho. early sixties and our civil war. Tho artist. Henry Mosler, came into considerable prominence then. He vn a lad in Cincinnati, th city of his birth. Major Anderson was there just after the bombardment of Fort Sumter, and Mr. Mosler saw him throughout the festivities incident to his passage through the place. He made some sketches apropos of the occasion and sent them to the editor of Harper's Weekly. They were promptly accepted, and their author was commissioned out of hand to act as the special artist in the v.vst for the periodical at that timo foremost in the pictorial celebration of the war. Mr. Mosler started for Louisville and sketched episodes in tho trouble thereabouts. Within a short time he mot Sherman, who gave him a rather bluff reception; but he was soon at homo in military life, and made fiicnds with the commander, who at first seemed to d:iuht that so young a man could be anything but an obstruction at the front, lie saw the battles of Mumfordsville, rViTsville, Somerset, Shil.-h, and Pittsburg Landing, besides many nameloss minor actions in various parts of Kentucky. Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama. All through this period Mr. Morler sent skotch.es and correspondence to Harper's Weekly, and old readers of the paper will reniortiber the spirit and pi.-turosqueness of his work. In IS'"! he threw up his commission and went to New York en rout" for Europe, whore he contemplated a long course of artistic study. His employers in the East were astonished when they s?w him. They had expected an elder man. Hut already Mr. Mosler Siad confirmed the faith which had been placed in his work, and not long after his arrival in Europe he showed even more conclusively that his talents were of a substanti.il character. lie entered at ouce upon a career which has been unHENRY MOSLER. ARTIST. broken in its .success, and has recentiy brought hini back to America to settle with a consciousness of work well done and well rewarded. When Mr. MosIr departed for Europe the Diu-sddorf school was in its glory, and he went straight to that center of German thoroughness and sentiment, lis found much there that established him in hi.-? art, but it was not long before the influence of Patis began to move him, and lio proceeded to the French capital. He entered tho atelier of Hebert, the man whoe refined and stately style was for some years tho presiding example at the Villa Medieis in Rome. Mr. Mosler profited by the thoughtful strain in his master. He fixed himself in the path to which he hid gravitated from the beginning, a path in which nothing was ever thought worth doing unless it served a serious purpose. He came back to America with a profound distaste for chic, for fragmentary and aitnle.-s sketching. He brought an equally profound enthusiasm for well-pondered compositions. In 1S74 ho returned to Europe, but for some reason or other the Parisian air was not as attractive as before, and he became Piloty's pupil in Munich, settling in the Bavarian city for throe years. At the end of that time his earlier fooling", wore revived and he went back to Paris. He has lived in that city, exhibiting at the Old Salon and winning honors there, until only the other day, when ho came back to New York. To recapitulate here Mr. Moslers recompenses abroad would be a dry and useless task; but there is one honor which it is necessary to mention, for ref-f-rence to it brings back the memory of his best work. This picture, "Le Retour." was first Miown in the Salon in IK71. Tho government espied it and purchased it for the Luxembourg. It war. the first time an American artist hail been so honored. Tho chances of admission to the anteroom of the French Pantheon were slight for a painter from ii, Jr. nniinlrv. It vns nnlv nf Lite vpar? i ei - J - " - that tho policy which has admitted Whistler. Sargent. Maetnonnies.Alexander Harris'Mi.nnd W.T.Dannat has been In favor. When Mr. Moslcr's picture was purchased it was in recognition of certain good qualities which at all times are rare. His art is not a brilliant one, but It is sound. It is based first of all on the most admirable of artistic data, that a picture should have not only the charm of color and personal character, but Intelligible form, intelligible construction. Tho average hfight of man In the United States is five feet ten unl one- , half Inches; In Prance, five fet four Inches; in llclglum, live icet six and one-fourth Inches.
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A GIRL HONORED.
Vhnscn to Position of Government librarian. Miss Adelaide Hasse, of Los Angeles, Cal.. who has just been appointed chief of the department of government documents and files at Washington, is a Wisconsin girl, having graduated from a Milwaukee high school. Secretary Morton was attracted to her ability as a librarian by her method of indexing publications of the agricultural department while In the Los Angeles public library. As city librarian. Mis3 Hasse made repeated requests for publications of the department at Washington, and it was during this correspondence that Secretary Morton became acquainted with the system of filing in vogue at Los Angeles and its inventor. On account of seme misunderstanding with Los Angeles library trustees both Miss Hasse and her assistant recently resigned her position there, which she had held for six years. A few days later she received a telegraphic offer of the WUSfH fi"'i. mm ADELAIDE HASSE, place at Washington. The documentary collection there is the largest of its kind in the world, containing upward of 000.000 volumes. Her appointment was made solely because of her merit and the marked ability she has shown In similar lines of work, of which she has always made a specialty. Her. work resulted in giving the Los Angeles library one of the most complete collections in the country, and a scheme of classification of them, devised by her, won her a medal at the world's fair, and its adoption has been decided upon in the government bureau. Miss Hasse has done some commendable literary work on horticultural and kindred topics. :he Js also interested In athletic subjects, and is an enthusiastic cyclist. Her particular fad, however, in sports is fencing, in which she Is an expert. ! TIpr falhpr 1 Tlr IlacQo nf tVie Rolniers Home, Santa Monica, Cal. The Tonpnre. The priests of the Catholic Church have three special ways of shaving the head. Those of the Latin Church shave tho whole crown, leaving a fringe of hair that represents the crown of thorns worn by tho Savior; and this Is called St. Peter's tonsure. The priests of the Greek Church shave the whole head and call it the tonsure of St. Paul. The other s-pecial tonsure is called that of Simon Magnus. A semi-circle is shaven from ear to ear, above tho forehead, but it dooS not reach to the back of the head, where the hair Is allowed to grow. This 1 it Is the one usually adopted by the Irish missionaries. Father Violet. Wien Napoleon left France for Elbe, he said, "I will return with the violets," and the followers who awaited his return wore always on their breasts a violet, and in their gathering they always drank to the toast of "Corporal Violet." Prints are in existence that in two violets have the outlined profiles of Napoleon and Marie Louisa, and beneath these are the words "En printemps il reviendra. There was a popular song early in this century, called "Le Pore do la Violette," and le pere was Napoleon. Itradley of Kentucky. This is the latest portrait of W. O. Bradley, who has been chosen by the W. O. BRADLEY. Republicans of Kentucky to lead the ticket in the gubernatorial campaign in that state. Order of the Garter. The widely circulated report that Queen Victoria proposed conferring the Order of the Garter on little Queen Wilhclmina, of Holland, is found to be entirely without foundation. It would be an unprecedented act, as the Garter , has never yet been bestowed upon a j female foreign sovereign, and In no case would it be given to one under the age of IS. The Queen Regent of Holland and the Empress of Russia have both received the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert from the Queen. An Tlonorable Record. The honor of being the oldest man In point of consecutive years in the employment of the city of Philadelphia Is accredited to Uncle David Brown, messenger In the Health Bureau. TTncle David has Just celebrated his flftyclghth year of service in the health office, and gives promise of contributing his faithful labors to the afcty for many ,
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years to come.
THIS COW GOT DRUNK.
She Had Fatrn Discarded Applet Went on a Four Days' Drunk. It Isn't often that a cow gets drunk and acts just like a man with a jag. But a Sussex county (X. J.) cow went on a spree recently. Washington Lambert, a well-known farmer, tells about it, and his language is as folows: "It wts up to Harm Sice's place. Sice'3 cow went wrong all of a sudden. Instead of giving her ten or fifteen quart3 of milk a day she dropped to throe, and seemed to do nothing but lie around in the pasture. Harm thought she was pretty sick and sent for a cow doctor. He come and looked at her and said that he reckoned that there wasn't much the matter with her, and told Harm to watch her for a couple cf days and he'd drop in again. Harm watched her and found that she was In a terrible state next morning, but after being turned out for a couple of hours she got kinder frisky at.d pranced around in great shape; then she went and laid down in thp r.hada of the barn and looked like she wa3 dead for hours. He kept watching her, and when she got up he followed her as she staggered over to the corner of the lot, and then he saw tho cause of the whole business. The cow was on a spree a regular old bat. Harm's old woman had been trying a scientific experiment in keepiDg winter apples and it wasn't a success. She had sorted out four barrels of rotten apples and the oldest boy had carried them out of tho cellar and dumped them over the fence into the pasture lot. The cow found them and went on a four days drunk. She'd cat until she was boozy and then lay down. When she got up feeling rocky she'd just go and get a hair of the same dog that bit her. Most anybody that has ever had a dose of hard cider can sympathize with that cow. Wheu Harm told me about it I said he'd better give her bromide for her nerves. He covered up the rotten apples, and after a couple of days of distress th cow came back to her milk. NEW TEN COMMANDMENTS. They Relate to Health Entirely and Jfot to Moral. 1. Thou ehalt have no other food than at meal time. 2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any pie9. Thou shalt not fail to chew or digest it, for dyspepsia shall be visited upon the children to the third generation of them that eat pie, and long life and vigor upon those that live prudently and keep the laws of health. 3. Remember thy bread to bake It well, for he will not be kept sound that eateth his bread as dough. 4. Thou rhalt not indulge sorrow or borrow anxiety in vain. 5. Six days thou shalt wash and keep thj-self clean, ?,nd the seventh day thou shalt take a great bath, thou and thy son, thy daughter and thy maid servant, and the stranger that is within thy gates. 6. Remember thy sitting room and thy bed chamber to keep them well ventilated, that thy days may be long In the land. 7. Thou shalt not eat hot biscuitwait. 8. Thou shalt not cat meat fried. . Thou shalt not eat thy found unchewed. cr highly spiced, or just before work or just after It. 10. Thou shalt not keep late hours in thy neighbor's house, nor with his cards, nor his glass, nor with anything that is thy neighbor's. Doom of Witty Frenchmen. "Great wits are sure to madness near allied." The doom of witty Frenchmen who cater to the amusement of the public seems to be the madhouse. Daumier, the greatest of French caricaturists, kept his mind by throwing away his pencil and retiring to vegetate in the country. Gill, Grevin, Guy de Maupassant died lunatics. It is now the turn of Jule3 Jouy, the comic singer, who sang with irresistible fun his exquisitely finished ditties. As. they dealt with current events, he was always on the lookout to give a fresh and comical turn to events not too hackneyed. His anti-Paulus musichall campaign against General Boulanger made him suddenly famous. Yvette Guilbert and the Coquelins found themselves eclipsed. The salons followed Montmartre in lionizing him. At the end of a few seasons he was rich and famous. But he fancied it was harder to keep than to win fame worried, fretted, overstrained his vis comica, and is now under restraint. London Truth. What rarat Sicnify. Twenty-four carat gold is all gold; twenty-two carat gold has twenty-two parts of gold, one of silver, and one of copper; eighteen carat gold has eighteen parts of pure gold and three parts each of silver and copper In its composition; twelve carat gold is half gold, tho remainder being made up of throe and one-half parts of silver and eight and one-half parts of copper. F.arrlnc Coming In Acln. Earrings are fast coming into fashIon again, so an uptown jeweler declares. Twenty years ago they were considered very stylish, but for th past ten years there has been but little demand for them. About a cir ago they began to be called for, and now the indications are that within a year they will be as much in vogue a3 they were twenty years ago. Hamlet Had One. Vorkhardd (after the play v-If an Impractical dreamer, liko Hamlet, had had to make his own living, what would he have done? Friend (a poet) Done as Ihe rest of us do borrowed rf his uncle.
