The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 May 1911 — Page 7

HER REAL REASON nmimiimi] By JOANNA SINGLE *■ —*'l When he had greeted Nora and Mary and Kate, and had given them the flowers, the sisters fell upon him with questions. He tried to evade them, but was finally helpless. ‘‘John Stanley, we’ve determined to know just what alls you. We’ve all refused to marry you in times past and have promised to be sisters and various other relatives to you, and we’ve a right to interfere,” said Nora. “For months something has been going on. Here you are, appareled like the spring in a new gray suit, and young and lovely, you come in on a heavenly evening like this, pale and thin as a shadow! Who is the lady? What has she done to you?” He laughed, but Kate took up the tirade. “Only love could make an Irishman look as miserable as you have looked all winter! You don’t mean that any girl In her senses refused you? Now If I hadn’t seen Jack first I would have taken you, but since I couldn’t — who is she?” He laughed. Could he tell these friends that a stiff little nod from Maidie Martin as he just met her in the park, a quiet glance from her dark eyes, had brought back the winter’s trouble? Could he say that April In £is blood drove him to the old desire !or what he might not have? A man night not speak of these things. “I’ll tell you nothing—but I’ll ask jomethlng. Why does a girl—turn a nan down?” He put up his fair young read as nonchalantly as possible. Nora looked wise and said, counting >n her fingers. “She- J *-loves somebody else, or no>ody at all, or the man in question loesn’t please her. Why else should she say ‘No?’ ” “What if she has never given him a :hance to ask her? Suppose after he’s met her—and fallen in love all at once like a fool of an Irishman —and after he’s been to see her, and walked with her on the pavements and in the autumn woods —and she seemed to tare.” “How would you know that?” queried Kate. “I suppose I didn’t know. It was the shining look of her when we met. Perhaps the gladness wasn’t for me. tr I I n I wlsOsßi .-I P\i VU i Hl if"-' * He Walked About for He Knew Not How Long. But I could have sworn it was. Once she entered an elevator I was in and she went pale—she doesn’t blush. We could be silent together. Well, I may as well tell you. I went to see her, or took her to lunch —she’s a worker In the downtown hive and it kills me to have her there —and then I began asking her to the theater. She went to vaudeville with me a few times. Then I found she loves music, and ask her to the grand opera. That was last winter. She wrote a stiff little note, politely refusing. It surprised me. “Why didn’t you ask her, face to face?’’ “She had a right to refuse. I had no right to an explanation. Beside, she seemed stiff and dignified next time I called. But I tried again—l asked her to the Bachelors’ ball. You know what’s choice. It would have shown the world my opinion of her. She refused that in the same quiet way. And all the time I would swear she liked me.” 1 The girls looked puzzled. .“Not knowing her,” said Nora, “I don’t know what’s the matter. Unless there’s somebody else.” He shook his head and flushed. “I’m not guilty of syping on her,” he said, “but I am sure there isn’t She receives no one —I learned It accidentally from a fellow worker of hers. She’s thin and tiffed. It makes my he ait ache. But I daren’t go to see her when my company is so plainly dlstastei'ul. She evidently meant her refusals for a hint and I have to take It I asked her to things even after the ball affair, too. Let’s talk of something else —angels that you’ve been to me, all of you! W’hat are you cocking your head at, Miss Kate?” 'The youngest sister looked demure. “I’ll bet she —Cares. Perhaps some meddler has told her you are engaged or married? She’s not strong enough to work days and go out evenings? Perhaps she thought you didn’t care, and did not want to make herself conspicuous by being much in public with to well-known a young business man,

especially when she’s not —in yout, set? Perhaps—well, perhaps she had nothing to wear to grand opera! Tims has been when It took the combined duds of the four of us girls to send one out in style to represent the family!” Kate nodded her wise head, and the others laughed, but John Stanley gave an inner start. “And perhaps —you’d find out what ailed her if you had the nerve to ask her straight and flat! That would be something definite. Deliver me from doubt —and a lover who is afraid of me!” Kate darted away in her impish fashion while the others stared at her unwonted display of worldly wisdom. Then other callers entered and the subject was dropped; but John Stanley felt something arise in his heart. It was a dogged determination, a feeling that had been a fool for false delicacy. He left early, and went out into the splendor of the moonlit April night He walked about for he knew not how long, through the park, down streets strange to him, recalling the brief weeks of the time of his happy expectation. All he knew about Maidie was the look of her and the little she had casually told him of herself. Her only sister had just died before she came to the city to work. They had been orphaned some yeara before and had lost their little property through some negligence of a guardian. She was alone, but her fine reserve never let him see her anything but cheerful. He trembled for her Inexperience and tenderness, he wanted to shield her youth and beauty. Kate’s sudden outbreak stuck in his memory. that night he went to bed after deciding to see Maidie and ask her if he might come to see her. No, he would not ask —he would go. The thought brought sleep and rest to him. . The next evening found him at the door of her decent but stuffy boarding house handing his card to the landlady. The sharp-faced woman gavte him a shrewd glance as he asked for Miss Martin, and shuffled away after seating him in the unspeakable parlor. It was ten minutes before the girl came down. She walked straight to ; him, tall and slim in her little blue dress, and offered him her hand proudly enough. Her dark hair framed her | face softly, and she was very pale as she seated herself opposite him, her hands folded in her lap. He tried to speak of generalities, but they would not do, and as he searched for a thing he could lay his glance caught a glimpse of the landlady’s face at a half-opened door. The woman was watching them! Anger surged up within him and flushed his face. He spoke Quite aloud to Maidie. “Miss Martin, will you not come for a little walk? It is beautiful out —and only a little after eight. I will bring you back as early as you like —won’t you come?” The child —she was hardly more than that, rose slowly, but with visible reluctance. Nevertheless she went out to the street with him, adjusting ■ her hat as they went. For a little they were silent. ■''xP “Would you prefer that I —should not come to see you—Maidie?” He turned his head, ©king eagerly into her downcast face. “Does my coming make it harder for you here?” She nodded her head silently. “What makes you stay where that horrid woman is?” She did not answer, for they were crossing a noisy street’, but in a moment they were in a little cool park where the young leaves were tender on the trees, and tulips lifted their heads from the soft young grass. “It’s—as good a place as I—can afford,” she said silently. “It doesn’t do me any good to —have you come.” He stopped short and looked at her, then the words rushed to his Ups. She was looking at him in a queer, frightened little way. "You know I love you, Maidie,” he said. “You have made me very miserable and unhappy all winter. I somehow dared to imagine that you were beginning to care last winter—and all of a sudden you wouldn’t accept any invitation of any sort, no matter how nice. Did your coolness mean you couldn’t —care for me? Was that itr She looked at him a moment and then shook her head slowly. But he caught at her and drew her towards him, unyielding as she was. “I want you to marry me, Maidie! Can’t you see. Come and live in my home—you needn’t be seen in public with me unless you like, you queer little beauty, but do love me a little! Can’t you?” She suddenly leaned wearily against him, both her hands over her face. But he knew that she loved him. After a little, when he had kissed her, he began questioning her again, insisting that she explain her past behavior. “I heard you were engaged to a Miss Nora somebody. The girls in the office and the landlady here were curious about you. I cared so much I was afraid they would see it—and you, too. And you—did not say—you loved me.” He interrupted her again, but at length she finished breathlessly. “And as forthe —opera —and the club dance —you might have known that I couldn’t afford —that I hadn’t anything to wear.” He held her very close. “And even a girl would be too proud to tell him— things like that!” But he hardly heard her for his anxiety to ask her at what particular hour she woujd consent to marry him. “Neither of us has a family,” he said. “Put on the little white dress you once wore when you walked witlj me last fall—and we’ll be married Saturday night Thia is Thursday—* will you?” Her hand folded itself about M strong fingers in utter trust

i of UeaUrdciu

Great Orator Had a Warning

i ■ Henry W. Grady Seemed to Have Premonition of Evil Before Going to Boston, Where He Contracted Fatal Cold. “Tn the early part of December. MB9—l think it was about two weeks after congress had met in regular ses■lon —I was sitting in my office in Washington one evening when a man | name in, threw himself into an unaecupled chair, and said: ‘Hello!”’ In this way the late Amos J. Cummings. who in 1889 was closing his first term in congress, described to tne bls last meeting with Henry W. Grady, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, who gained national fame* in a single night by a speech which he made on “The New South” before the members of the New England society In New Yoirk on the evening of Fore- , fathers* Day, 1888. “I noticed the moment Grady sat Sown,” Mr. Cummings went on. “that he seemed to be tn ill health, or else was mentally distressed. He pushed bis hat upon the back side of his bead, leaned forward, placed his elbows upon the table, and dejectedly rested his chin in both hands. i “ ‘Don’t you feel well?’ I asked; and he replied that so far as he knew he was perfectly well physically, but i that he had been laboring under a fit | of srreat depression, which had seized him the very moment he took the train at Atlanta for the north. “T1 inking to cheer him up a bit, I said to him that no man who had gained so swiftly the brilliant reputation which had come to him from one address ought to have a moment’s depression. He gave me no I direct answer, but said instead: “‘I am on my way to Boston. They have invited me to deliver an address there on the evening of Forefathers’ Day. They asked me last year, but I was unable to go to Boston then Tb"t New York address, so far as’its success was concerned, was as great : a surprise to me as it could have been : to any of those who invited me to speak at the New England dinner.’ “Having said this, Grady burled his face in his hands. I thought that he was fearful that he would not main- ■ tain at Boston the reputation he had ■ gained three years earlier In New York. I asked him if he was to speak upon the sama subject, ‘The New South.’ How fervid was his rhetoric Opon that occasion! With what perfection of the spoken word he prophesied the future of the united coun-

Cleveland’s View of Arthur

I He Had Sincere Admiration for Hla Predecessor and for Hia Skill and Courage In Handling a Difficult Situation. Mr. George F. Parker, the biographer of Grover Cleveland and his intimate friend for years, had many opportunities for confidential conversation with Mr. Cleveland, during which the latter spoke freely of men and events of the political generation with which ke was identified. “On one occasion,” said Mr. Parker, “when I was chatting with Mr. Cleveland —it was while he was serving his first term as president—some chance reference was made to his predecessor in the White House, Chester A. ] Arthur. Instantly, Mr.-Cleveland spoke In a most tender and sympathetic manner of General Arthur, and when he had finished I was much impressed by the earnestness and the cordiality of his appreciation of President Arthur , and his' administration.” At this point I interrupted to say that I had high authority for the statement that before Cleveland became governor of New York, and certainly after ,he had entered the executive mansion at Albany, he had sincere admiration for General Arthur, primarily based on some business or professional association of an earlier day. “That feeling,” replied Mr. Parker, “Mi Cleveland still more strongly entertained after he had been some time In the -presidency. His early experiences in that office made it clear to him how very difficult the position of Generaj Arthurr must have been when he entered the presidency, not as presidentelect, buj by virtue of constitutional succession. *? cannot undertake to repeat President ClevejAßd’s precise words, but I can give you very clearly the substance of his opinion respecting Gen-eral-Arthur as president and the reasons he gave for holding that opinion He discovered that there were always embarrassments, some of them serious, awaiting a newly inaugurated president. Frequently, these are difficult In case the succession passes to one of an opposite party. But General Arthur became president because of th€ assassination of President Gar- > field. Passion was aroused throughout the country. Grievous factional disturbances had been created in the Republican party. It was an extraordinary difficult responsibility that ■waited General Arthur in view ot the

® try! How apt were his metaphors, entirely free from any grandiloquent flourish, the more effective by reason of their simplicity! I thought of this, and I wondered whether he would be able at Boston to stir the sons of New England in the New England capital as he had moved the sons of New England in New York. “He must have known what was in my mind, for he said that he was not at all concerned about the effect of his speech in Boston. And he was not going to speak of the new south, but of some phases of the negro question. Tt will be a more serious subject than the one I chose for New York, because the negro question is the grave one of the South? he continued. ‘But I gm going to tell them about it exactly what I think.’ “Again Grady stopped, and once more rested his face in his hands. At last he said: “I don’t know what has come over me. I hare not the slightest anxiety about my Boston speech, but I can’t shake off this feeling of depression. It I were superstitious, I should say that it is portentous.’ “I suggested to him that perhaps his stomach was out of order. “ ‘No,’ he replied, ‘it is not that But I don’t know what it is. 1 went to New York witli a light heart, and

Story of White’s Elevation

President Cleveland, Vexed by Two Rejeptions by Senate, “Got as Far Away From New York State as Possible.” But for Grover Cleveland’s determination “to get as far away from New York state as possible,” Edward Douglas White would probably not now be chief justice of the United States Supreme court. And the various interesting details of how he came to be put on the bench as an associate justice by President Cleveland are given here for the first time. President Cleveland found it expedient to summon congress into extraordinary session in the summer of 1893. Panic prevailed. There had been a virtual suspension erf payments by the banks. The president was assured that if congress would repeal the socalled Sherman silver law, confidence would be restored. It so happened

fact that he was recognised as one of the leaders of the Stalwart faction of the party, the faction that had placed itself in opposition to the administration of President Garfield. But Cleveland had a good opportunity for learning how skilfully and with what gentle firmness and a complete sense of patriotic duty President Arthur met the responsibility. He was particularly impressed by General Arthur's display of moral courage when he vetoed the first river and harbor bill sent to him —a bill outrageously crammed with 'pork.' And I distinctly remember what Mr. Cleveland said after he had told of the difficulties that had beset Arthur and pointed to the fact, that by the end of his term the breach in his party had been healed and there was recognition in congress that a patriot, conscientious and earnestly patriotic citizen had been administering the government: “‘I do not think that the country as yet iully realizes or appreciates the ' high character of the service of President Arthur. But I feel certain that when the accurate history of his administration and times is written there will come a full appreciation, which will be the abiding judgment of the American people.”’ (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) Hydrophobia In Russia. According to the Berlin correspondent of the London Lancet, 405 persons were officially recorded as having been bitten by rabid animals in Prussia in 1909. The animals inflicting the Injuries are described as 190 dogs, 5 cats, 3 horses and 4 other domesticated animals. In 19 eases the patient contracted the disease . from other persons. Os the total number of persons bitten 374 (92.1 per cent) received Pasteur tieatment. There were 10 deaths in all, 8 of the dead having been treated by Pasteur’s method, so that among 374 persons treated in this way, 8 (2.13 per cent) died, and among 32 persons not treated in this way, 2 (6.25 per cent) died. Too Much to Ask. “I would gladly die for you," he exclaimed. \ “But what I am going to ask you to do calls for greater heroism on your part than that,” she replied slowly. “What is it?” he asked. •Go to work,” she answered. “Anything but that," he responded, giving up in despair.

with real enthusiasm. I go to Boston ! laboring under this depression.’ “He tried to shake off the feeling, we chatted for a while, and then, with a forced cheerfulness, he bade me good bye. A few days later I read the reports in the papers of Grady’s ! Boston address, learned that he had maintained his New York reputation. I and I said to myself: ‘Now that fit of depression will pass.* “A few days later the news came . from Atlanta that Henry W. Grady was deed. It is my recollection that J he caught a cold at Boston which developed swiftly into mortal disease. And I have never had any doubt that some monition had come to him of what his destiny was to be—the real explanation of the depression that ha was laboring under when last I saw him.” (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards. AU Rights Reserved.) Queer Place for Nest. Birds in London sometimes choose queer nesting-places. A pair of spar rows have this year chosen the granite crown of the Royal coat of arms which decorate the massive gothic arch of the middle tower of the Tower of London. There they have been seen actively at work designing the architecture of their home. The birds have only just room enough to get in and out jcrf"?he stonework at the base of the crown.

that a vacancy upon the bench of the Supreme court had occurred, and the president determined to send into the senate at the extra session the nomination at a lawyer to fill that va- | cancy. Taking counsel solely with himself, he sent in the nomination of William D. Hornblower of New York. The senate did not act upon the nomination ' at the special session, and so as congress adjourned without confirming the appointment. It was necessary for the president to make a new nomination when congress met in December. It was suggested to him that he send some other name than that of Mr. Hornblower to the senate. In fact, Mr. Hornblower himself made this j suggestion. But «srover Cleveland would not have been the man he was had he agreed to a suggestion of that kind. “Your nomination wilt go to the senate again, and will stay there until it is confirmed or rejected,” he said to Mr. Hornblower. The nomination was again made, and David B. Hill, then a senator, caused it to be rejected. A day or two later President Cleveland sent to the senate the nomination of Wheeler H. Peckham of New York for associate justice. Senator Hill made this nomination a personal issue. He had urged the senate to reject Hornblower on the ground that he was not a loyal Democrat. But Wheeler H. Peckham was a personal as well as a political enemy. Mr. Hill therefore appealed to the custom known as senatorial courtesy, and in that way he secured the rejection of the nomination of Peckham for justice. Thereupon Grover Cleveland deter* mined so to act as to put an end to ; the playing fast and loose with his i nominations to the Supreme court bench. “I am going to get as far away from New York stat? as possible,” he declared. “The senators from New York appear not to want a New York i man to fill the vacancy upon the bench caused by the death of a justice who was nominated from New York. Well, I think I can accommodate them.” The president asked one or twe friends to sound the senators quietly respecting the availability of Edward D. White, senator from Louisiana, as associate justice. Those friends told j President Cleveland that Senator White came from an old Louisiana Whig family. “Well, there isn’t any Whig party i now; Senator White was elected as a ! Democrat and he is a Democrat,” was the reply. “Would there be the slightest objection to his appointment?” And the I answer was that if he sent Senator White’s name to the senate for associate justice that body would confirm the appointment within ten minutes. While this consultation was going on Senator White was ignorant of what was in the president’s mind. A few hours before his nomination was sent to the senate a friend said to Senator White: “President Cleveland is going to Louisiana for his Supreme court justice. He says he is going to get as far away from New York state as possible, because the New York senators don’t want a New York man appointed." “That would be a great honor for Louisiana,” Senator White said. Whether 1 just previously he had a more direct Intimation of the president’s purpose is not known, but his nomination was speedily confirmed, and it was confirmed unanimously and with such evidence of cordial appreciation that Senator White was deeply touched. (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edward.. A'l Rights Reserved.)

That Tired Feeling That comes to you every spring is a sign that your blood is wanting in vitality, just as pimples i and other eruptions are signs that it is impure. Do not delay treatment; begin at once to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which effects its wonderful cures, not simply because It contains sarsaparilla, but because it combines the utmost remedial values of ; twenty different ingredients, raised to their highest efficiency for the cure of j all spring troubles, that tired feeling and loss of appetite. There is do real substitute; insist on having Hood’s Sarsaparilla

1 “I felt tired all the time and could not sleep nights. After taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla a little while I could sleep well and the tired feeling had

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I gone. This great medicine has also i cured me of scrofula, <which had L troubled me from childhood,” Mrs. 1 C. M. Root, Box 25, Gilead, Conn.

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