USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Franklin > Franklin Sentinel newspaper, 1900 > Part 196
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Parity and Goodness.
Purtty and goodnesa alone con mas- ter the Illa of the flesh, for "to he spiritually minded is life and peace."- Rev. F. E. Mason, Spiritualist, Brook- ly n.
Thinking and Charmeter,
Our thinklug determines our char- acter. If you wish to be a true, man- ly inan, you must think on mauly suh- jects,-Rev. Dr. Laudrum, Baptist, At lantn.
Enlightenment For Our Souls.
Eddie Reed, a boy preacher of Paris, We should enlighten our souls Ills,, has Induced several of his fellow through the revelations which God bas townsthen to sign pledges to refrain fromu given us in hia word, in his Son and in bis providence,-Rev. D. C. Macleod. Presbyterian, Washington.
Confession.
Coutritlou or surrow for sin Is the es- aential life of this sacrament. Without true abiding sorrow for sine courmitted confession woukl be a form. Rev. F. H. Gavisk, Catholic, Indianapolis.
God's Order In Our Lives.
You cannot quake and fix the hounds of life according to order except ac- cording to God's order, which Is au or- der of spirit and principle .- Rev. Na than 1Iugh Lee, Methodlat, Denver.
Personal Influence.
Our Influence in this world depends for its value for good or evil ou our falth lu Christ as it Is illustrated in our thought, word and deed as we live be- fore God and man .- Rev. R. F. Eakes Atlanta,
An Ideal That May Be Realised. The man who purposes great wealth may miss it, or great distinction may fall of it, but the man who purposes to follow Christ bere and bereafter may realize bis Ideal if be will .- Dr. Vosburgh, Baptist, Denver. Love to God.
Love to God and love to men, daily and everywhere. Such a ilfe will take us to the house of God, there to ac- knowledge our repeated failures, to seek forgiveness, to ask for beip, but the life of service will be llved out among men .- Rev. Edmund Duck- worth, Episcopal, St. Louis.
Potting on Chrlat.
Let us love bumility and lowliness: let ns burn away our sins with scalding tears of repentance; let us keep our hearts for him alone; let us put on Christ; then when the shadows of thia world sball have passed we will see hlin face to face for eternity .- Rev James T. Coffey, Catbolle, St. Loula.
Life's Prinelple.
Love is the energizing principle of Ilfe, God Is love, and since man waa made In God's Image be, too, sbould exercise love. This is the bigbeat thing man can do. to love. Jesus did not manifest bis love by $fatuation, hut hy pity, sympathy and mercy. Love Is the life principle .- Mrs. Matilda Fletch- er, at the Tabernacle, Denver.
Christ Vietorions.
The aplritual baptism of the Son of God was one of heaven'a mysteriea. The temptation likewise la a mystery. How could Jeaua be tempted? And yet in hls temptation our Lord, for himself and for every disciple, atands aa the victorious Son of God, "tempted in all points like as we are."-Dr. MI- chael Burnham, Congregationallat, St. Louis.
Salvation.
Salvation means being naved, and it onght to mean saved from aln, not saved from punishment. It onght to mean the good life and not forgiveness onght not to be any idea akin to magic in our conception of salvation, that God in a supernatural way washes onr nature clean from all atain of guilt and magically frees us from evil desire .- Rev. David U'tter, U'oltarian, Denver. Power of God's Life In the World. If you drop a live seed into a bit of mud, If it la a live seed. it will take that mnd and build It over into hloa- aom and fragrance with perfect facili- ty. Now, If a bit of vegetable life can do that how is It possible that we are ever anch Infidels aa to imagine that the very life of God planted in the world cannot tackle a little moral mud and convert It into beauty and perfumne just as fast as It is the pleasure of hia Infinite and generous purpose to have It done ?- Rev. Dr. Parkhurst, Preshy- terian, New York.
Choreh Popolarining.
The desire to popularize the church is not unrighteous. It is sometimea born of personal ambition of leaders who seek to nse her popularity in the attainment of selfish ends, but it is a recognized prinelple that the auccesa of an enterprise wbose end Is to uplift the fallen. lighten Ilfe'a hurden and ex- alt character la measured by its abili- ty to gain and hold the favor of the people who are to be reached, and out ef thia fact grows the general desire to popularize the church .- Rev. E. M. Smith, Christian Church. Centralla, Mo
The World's Greatest Bouk. The Bible is the greatest book the world bas ever kuown, and I accept it from cover to cover. In the canous of rhetoric and literature It Is acknow !- edged to be without an equal. Science corroborates it. civilzation has beeu possible only by its teachlogs and its laws of ethics in Jurisprudence the world over are taken as the standaril. and finally. Its great scheme of the world's nelemption as outlined iu the New Testament stamps it as divine. In er for a moment doubted its great truths and its historic narratives. The to it. young man, for in it ye have the chart that sball make yon a better man and citizen. Rev. Camden M Co. bern. at Y. M. C. A. Ilall, Denver
THE CENSOR.
That "they do these things better in France" does not apply to the futal acci- dent on the fair grounds .- New York World.
Falling into the sea is the latest adver- tising actress' scheme. Fulling off the earth has not yet been tried .- St. Louis Post- Itspatch.
liambull is good while it lasts. keeps a boy from smoking cigarettes while he wears the cage over bis couute- Dance .- New Orleans I'icayune.
The new kissing bug is much larger than the Que reported last year, but it is not making anything like as big a sea- sation .- Philadelphia Ledger.
it is on unfortunate fuet that the nse of corn for feeding annuals is one of the obstacles ngainst its popularization as a food fer buwiun beings .- Cbiengo Record If Alaska is ever to have a permanent population, one that will regard the couu- try as a home, the Finns sre just the people to start it .- Pittsburg Commer- cial Gazette.
"Incircumscriptiblenese" is not the loa- gest word in the English isnguuge. "Non- intercomtuunicability" is a longer one, which may appear in the new Oxford dictionary. It will be a great boon to epnce writers .- Boston Globe.
Yes, human nature is very discourag- Ing. it is hard sometimes to make the punishment fit the crime, but it would seem that the whipping post and wife bentiug are exactly suited to each other. The experiment is worth trying .- New York Herald.
LITTLE "BOBS."
Lord Roberts' military "net" Is one that lets the big fishes escope ns easily ns the little ones .- New York World. Even if Lord Roberts bas not con- quered the Boera be seems to have got the better of the wor critics .- Syracuse Post-Standard.
It was well enough for Lord Roberts to call Africa the graveyard of military reputatious, but it is scarcely fair for bim to become a wholesale military un. dertaker .- New York Journal,
Lord Roberts' nim sooner or later must be to bring the Hours to face bim in a pitched battle. L'util he destroys or thor onghly cripple's the military power of the fulerals bis job is not ended .- Brookly .. Citizen.
THE ART OF WAR.
"Sniping" is fring by sharpshooters wherever they see an quemy's bead or finn b.
Troops on outpost doty do not salute their superiors or notice them unless ad- dressed.
There are over 20 rope knots used in military engineering. in addition to which for pontooping und spar bridging there are several different forms of lashing and bracing.
Wide pontoon bridges are steadier than narrow ones. The bonte for sucb struc- tures should not be immersed deeper than witbin n foot of the top and are placed stem on to the current.
ALUMINIUM.
Music is being printed in one-half the time on aluminium plotes as against stones.
A new fasbion is coming in of coating stoves wib nluminium. Tbe material is practically indestructible.
Dr. Mneb of Berlin has mode a new alloy of magnesium and aluminium, pro- ducing a compound like brass, white as silver, which can he turned and bored. Aluminium, wbieb bad no commercial existence n few years ago, was produced in the United States Inst yenr to the ex- tent of 5.200.000 pounds, valued at $1,- 450.000. which is one-tentb of the cost of ten years ago.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Instead of rickety tables for china and bric-a-broc a house decorntor advises a narrow shelf across one side of the room opon whieb lo stand jugs and teapots. The best cure for the disgusting cock- roncb is to purchase a poison pbospborous paste and spread it on bread. Tbis kills them in a few minutes. They go away to die.
To take the letters and coloring off new flour sacks, put them into the boiling suds after the white clotbes are taken ont. Let them stand 20 minutes or balt an bour; then with very little rubbing they will come out white.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Muat Bear Signature of
Brentwood
See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below.
Very small and as esdy to take as sugar.
FOR HEADACHE. CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS.
ITTLE IVER PILLS.
FOR BILIOUSRESS. FOR TORPIO LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIR. FOR THE COMPLEXIOR GENUINE HVIT MAH JJO NATURE.
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
" A Miss is As
Good as a Mile."
If you are not entirely well, you are il. Iness does not mean death's door, It is A sense of wearness, a " tired feeling." a life filed with nameless pains and suffer- ing. I. 90 . of cases the blood is to blame. Hood's Sarsaparina is Nature's corrective for disorders of the blood. Remember
Hood's Sarsaparilla Never Disappoints
True, Bat Awful,
First Newspaper Render (in smok. ing compartment)-I hear they have nearly reached those poor minera who were entouibed by that explosion. Second Newspaper Reader-Yes, they have ha'pennytrated the wall of rock.
Third Newspaper Reader-You mean penetrated.
Second Newspaper Reader-No, } don't. They're only half way through. -Ally Sloper.
Those Loving Girls, Maude-Mr. Willing naked me to ac company him to the opera to-morrow evening.
Clara-And you accepted the invita- tion ?
Mnude-Certainly.
Clara-Strange. He asked me also. . Maude There's nothing strange about it at all. I told him I wouldn't go without he provided a chaperon .- Chicago Daily News.
Then and Now.
They met; she was a maiden fair and he a faultleee swell. 'Twas on the broad plazza of a watering place hotel: And now that chilly autumn's here, they meet In town once more-
"Tis at the ribbon counter of a Broadway dry goods store.
-Harlem Life.
THOUGHTFUL TO THE LAST.
He-Oh, Mary] I can't bold on any ; tion.
longer.
She-Then wait till I get out of the way. No use losing a bushand and a new hat at the same time .- Harlem Life.
Peraletowa inquisitiveness. "What is a professional, pop?" "A professional, my son, is one who indulges in a sport where money flg- bres."
"When you go fishing and huy your fish, that doesn't make you a proten- sional, does it?"-Yonkers Statesman.
Impossible.
Patrioticus-There will never be a name like Dewey in French history. Quibleigh-Oh, I don't know. There might be.
Patrioticue -Never. There is no "w" in French anyway .- N. Y. Journal.
A Juvenile Philanthropist.
Mother-No. Tommy, you mustn't have any more turkey. I'm afraid It might make you sick. Tommy-Well, If folks didn't get sick the doctors couldn't have any Thanks giving .- Judge.
With All Improvements. First Tramp-I hear they are build- Ing a new jail, with all modern improve- ments.
Second Trump -- That won't do us no good. You'll need a pull to get in there. -Fliegende Blaetter.
The Worm Turns.
Mrs. Peck-I wouldn't act like an Idiot if I were you, Henry. Mr Peck-No, of course you wouldn't. dear, hut as you are not me you might at least try to act a little less idiotic .- Chiengo Dally Newa.
Marked Zero,
Teacher-What does the word mar- supial mean ?
Tommy-Carrying a pouch. Teacher- Give an example of a mar- supial.
Tommy-A tobacco smoker .- Chi- cago Tribune.
Pat to a New I'ne.
'Twaa the first letter written on typewriter that Rachel had ever re- ceived.
"Mamma, mamma!" exclaimed the little lady as the postman left, "I've got a letter that was written on the aewing machine."-Judge.
She Gave Him No Chance. Bacon-Did you say you hadn't bad a chance to speak to your wife ahout that matter we talked over, Inst week ? Egbert-That's what I said. "Well, It seems very strange." "Ob, no, it doesn't. You don't know my wife."-Yonkera Statesman.
Seeking Information, "Oh, Mr. Von Dobbs!" exclaimed Mri. Cumrox.
"What Is it?" inquired the artist. "Would yon mind telling me whether this picture Is impressionistic or whether It hasn't been finished."- Washington Star.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
SAVINGS BANK.
FRANKLIN, MASS.
D. THAVER, JR., President. GRO. W. WIGGIN. CUAS. J. MCKENZIE,
Vice- Presidents. CHAS. W. STEWART, Clerk and Treasurer. Dividends declared the first Momiay In January And July, payable on and after the 15th of said months.
Money may be withdrawn at the option of the lepositors. The treasurer quay, however, require a notice if necessary, IN accordance with the Statute 1.AW.
Hank open daily from: 9 s. in. to 12 mu., anıl from I to i p. ts.
BOARD OF INVESTMENT. D. Thayer, Jr., E. H. Sherman, A. D. Thayer. Chas. J. Mckenzie, E. P. Chapman, Charlee Stewart, George W. Wiggin. STATEMENT MAY 31, 1900. LIABILITIES.
Due Depositors 6.268 89 Guarantee Fund .. Tront and Loss Account. | Interest Account .. Real Estate Income Account 4559.245 21 27.782 79 184 23
Tax account.
ANBEIS.
Town and City Bonits ..
Hank Stock .. $1,07| 25
21,719 32
Ratiroad Bonds 66.262 60
Real Estate hy Foreclosure Loaned on Bank Stock 6,350 00 20,748 00
Mortgages .. 1496,310 04
** 1'eranual Securities Railroad Stock ..
164,870 MC
Bank Books, Town Notes ...
1,500 00
Expense Account Bank Furniture .. Bank Deposits :
735 27 600 00
Franklin National Bank .. $10,9ty 15 Nat. Bark of Redemption 9,018 65 Mercantile Trust CO ... · 12,0,5 3%
Cash on hand.
32,013 t& 2,074 97
$602,315 35
We, the undersigned, have this day examined the books and vouchers of this bank and find they corresponit with the above statement,
CHAS. J. MCKENZIE Committee of Examination.
June 6, 1900.
BOSTON AND FRANKLIN EXPRESS.
E. F. WINSLOW, Prop. (Successor to RAZEE & SON).
Orders leave Franklin at 8.05 and 9 a.m. Goods returned by freight at 2.30 same day.
Franklin Office at Razee & Son's old stand, Post Office Block. Boston Offices, 75 Kilby St., 105 Arch St. and 15 Merchants' Row. ap14.Ftf
LOW RATES 3 MINUTES' CONVERSATION
APPROXIMATELY
AS FOLLOWS:
For a distance of 5 m-s- & o ' less, - 10c:
5 to 15 mlies, - - 15¢
15 to 25 - - 20c 25 10 35 - 25€ 35 to 45 .. - 30℃
Rate» for greater distances in propor-
Apply for schedule of rates to
New England Telephone & Tele- graph Company.
#825 F
News and Opinions OF National Importance.
THE SUN ALONE CONTAINS BOTH.
Daily, by mall, 86 a year Dally and Sunday, by mail, $8 a year
The Sunday Sun
Is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world.
Price oc. n copy. By mail $2 a year. Address THE SUN, New York.
VACUUM OIL COMPANY,
.... BOSTON.
Telephone 1839.
A FINE LINE OF Cotton Mill Oils.
PATENTS DESIGNS TRAOE-MARKS
OATAINEO
AOVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY Notice in "Inventive Age " Book "How toobtain Patents"
FREE
Charges moderate, No fee till patent Is secured. Lettera strictly confidential. Address, E. G. SIGGERS, Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C.
PENNYROYAL PILLS
BAFE. AF for CHICHESTEINS ENGLISH IS NED and Gold metaille bones eraled with blue ribbon. Take no other, Ileru Dangorone Aabetitutions and Imite- ef Jour Druggist. or send de. Le Particulars, Teatimeatala "Reltef for Ladies, " in Inter. br re 10.000 Tesilmesinis. Held by Chlehester Chamleal Oo. Madison Park, PHILA., PA.
Mantion this peper. je22-4w
PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautified the hair. Promoles a luxuriant 1 Frosth. o Reatore Gray
Never Falls to Restore Hair to its Youth! 1 Color.
Hair to ite Youthful Ogler: Cures scalp dipenses & hair falling Me, And #14) a) Drugglite
je8-4w
MONEY To PATENT Good Ideas may be secured hy our mld. Address, THE PATENT RECORO, Amitimsro, Md.
Bubecriptions to The Patent Record 11.00 per snoum.
In the
Business Announcements cent-a: wifi column in the BENrinkt nie Invariahly reLG
1
1 in .. 1 00 1 25 3 14. 1 15 2 2
1 50
1 15 2 50 3 25 6.00
10 00
14 00 2200 16 00 28 00 33 00
Ayer's Hair vigor
acts almost instantly on such hair. awakens new life in the hair bulbs. The effect is astonishing. Your hair grows, be- comes thicker, and all dandruff is removed. And the original color of early life is restored to faded or gray hair. This is always the case.
$1.00 m bottle. All druggists. " I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor, and am really astonished at the good it has done In keeping my hair from coming out. It is the best tonie 1 have tried, and shall continue to recommend it to my friends."
MATTIE HOLT.
Sept. 24, 1898.
Burlington, N. C.
If you do not obtain all the benefits Tou expected from the use of the Hatr or, wHits the Doctor about It DR. J. C. AYER, Lowsil. Mass
Hls Faith Rewarded,
George had wanted a bicycle for a long time. Last year his birthday was embittered by the fact that he did not get the much-coveted wheel, and so be nwaited the day thia time with much anxiety. During the week before he regularly and earnestly resorted to prayer that he might have his desire granted. His parents really feared for hls faith should he be disappointed, Therefore on the morning of his birth- day he found awaiting him by his hed- side a beautiful new wheel. "Well." he called out cheerfully, "I thought the Lord wouldn't have the nerve to refuse te this time."-Current Literature.
Apparent Difference.
Johnny-Pa, some of the corions people ronnd here they call "odd" and some of the others "eccentric." What's the difference ? Pa-When a man is said to be ec- centric he usually bas more or less which the amount of moisture can be money. When be is poor a man is sim ply odd .- Boston Transcript,
Monleipal Jesiannien.
New Yorker-You are a stranger bere, I presume?
Chicago Man (hanghtily)-1 am from the great city that New York ia jealone of.
New Yorker-Ah! And how are
things in dear old Lunnon !- N. Y. for having lived a had life. There Weekly.
Heap o' Difference.
Mrs. Jorks (reading the evening pa- per)-I see that Mrs. Moaner's jewel case bas been stolen. I wonder how much it would be worth ? Mr. Jorks-That depends, dear. whether it is Mrs. Moaner the actress or Mrs. Moaner the banker's wife .- Ally Sloper.
Litteratenin Confesston.
"To grow long hair I'm tryle'. And the reason must be plain; To become & social lioz
One of course must have a mane." -Washington Star.
Yet some people are never buugry. Whatever they eat has to be "furced There is, of course, something wrong with these people. By taking Hlvod's Sarsaparilla a abort time they are giveu an appetite and then they enjoy eating and food uonrisbes them. If you
He Don't Believe it. Mary-Teacher says history repeats
Tommy-Well. I guess it don't. And a fe ler's got to do some purty hard scrappin' to be able to repeat it him- seit .- N. T. T-utb.
HAIR
HELP
So many persons have hair that is stubborn and dull. It won't grow What's the reason? Hair needs help just as anything else does at times. The roots re- quire feeding. When hair stops growing it loses its lus- ter. It looks dead.
to 00 16 00
3 to. . 2 50
2 75 3 25 450 5 75
1
6
$002,315 35
11,000 00
5,000 00
the wicked game of draw poker, Little Eildie probably struck a bunch of losers. -Buffulo Express.
It
The Kid You Have Always Bought Chart Thatchers of
NJI Druggless.
THE SENTINEL, FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 22, 1900.
CASTORIA
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
Chart, Fletchers and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infaney. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfelts, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex- periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregorle, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains nelther Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, enres Constipation and Flatuleney. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of
Chart, Fletcher.
The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY ET, NEW YORK CITY.
LONGING
Tell me, ye rocki or heaven's arched akies, Is there a place where friendship never dies, Where to our hearts No knowledge comes of piercing wronga Or bad tho'ts crowd in countless thronga To deaden life's bright dream, Where doubts dwell not por fears Molest our bappiness ?
Oh, answer back, ye hills, and tay There is a land where endless day Claims one perpetual song. Where friendship's flowers live for aye And hope's refreshing stream Flows constantly, with love'a soil Furled upon it!
No night ere comes to lead us where The rocks lay hidden under Or storma arise in friendship's skies To tear our barka asunder. Oh, may'st thou lead us quickly on Ere tired we grow of waiting Into that land of love and 600g Where joys are unabating. -A. T. H. in Philadelphia Bulletin.
Madge Marbury's Message
Summer Romance In a City.
"No, I'm tired of seaside romances, ao I propose to stay here and see what sort of romance a summer in New York has to offer."
Sam Storrow jumped upon a north bound electric car as he spoke, leaving the man to wbom be had announced his plans in a speculative mood.
"I'll bet." murmured Ralpb Ralston, as be hailed the next south bound car, "that Storrow's had a row with Madge Marbury."
Since the date, just four years ago, when they had left Harvard, neither Sam Storrow nor Ralph Ralston bad settled down to any serious occupa- tion. They had devoted themselves to the somewhat Indefinite pastime of "looking around."
It bad been the kind of looking around usual with idle men of private means-moderate dissipation and love- msking, or the pretense of lovemaking, with women who were as well off and as Idle as themselves.
But it must be admitted of the two Storrow's life had been much the more innocent, and his affair with Miss Madge Marbury might have resulted In matrimony ere this were it not for the frequency of their petty quarrels, none of which might ever have occur- red if they had not bad so much Idle time to quarrel in.
The excitement of these little tiffs bad begun to pall upon him, and when the last one occurred he decided that be would stay In town when Madge went away. in fact, be was hard up ror a new sensation.
The electric car whirled him rapidly up Madison avenue. He looked at the monotonous array of drawn shades la the bouse fronts-inevitable symptom of the summer season-and the thought came to bim of the darkened. silent re- ception rooms so gay with beauty and fashion in winter time. But the hutter- fles hod fled to shore aud mountain, leaving Madison avenue to console It- Eelf until their return. Miss Madge Marbury bad gone to Bar Harbor.
"Goodby, Mr. Storrow," she had said to him just before they parted. hope you'll find some romance in the city to compensate you for your self Inposed aad solitary martyrdom."
These words came back to him now, and the recollection made him feel more than ever resolved to find bis ro- mance during his summer in town. Ile would not have Madge Marbury chaff blm on her return.
Ralph Ralston thoroughly disagreed with Sam Storrow as to the relative charms of city and seaside in summer. This was natural, for the two men had never agreed upon any question since the day they first met, and neither bore
muti itve to ward tae other.
So a few days after the meeting with Storrow Ralston was In the vortex of Bar Harbor's gay life, troubling him- selt very little about romance and con- tent with agreeable realities.
There was no more agreeable reality than his present proximity to Miss Madge Marbury on the veranda of a cottage thst nestled picturesquely up among the pines.
They were enjoying the beauty of the cool Maine night. The intense blue of the heavens gave that suggestion of limitable vastness which, though the suggestion may be always there, is only horne in on us under the spell of certain moods; the song of the pines kept time with the more distant music of the incoming tide, and the breeze came laden with n mingled fragrance of balsam and odor of ocean'brine.
"Can you imagine, Miss Marbury, a more fantastic notion than his staying in town in search of romance when he might be bere?"
Ralston had been expatlating upon the eccentricities of Sam Storrow. "I don't know," she said. "We may And our romance in the most unexpect- ed places."
"I rather Imagine that Storrow aome- how is not without some definite Idea of where to find his romance." She began to think. If that were so. wby should be not find it near her? Her vanity was piqued, and Ralston, being a good tactician, tried to follow np bis advantage.
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