.1 4 ! THE SALISBURY JEVSNINGr SUN, FRIDAY,; XPKLL 21, 1905 t i & - i I I t ! $3.00 : p5 Oxford ', I ies By Express Today. 1,000 Samples, Just one pair of a kind at! wholesale prices. FURN TORE! If it is a gocartj a room of Matting, an iron or brass bed, a pair of lace curtains pr anything to fur- f y the home then - J i call on Jl The Spencerfl'busefurnishing Co SPENCER'S LEADING FURNITURE DEALERS. W.'Jt BK1TT, Mgi" p. WE sIell for cash t ! OR ON EASY PAYMENTS. Talking is a lost art, except pugilists. among rich, A strengtn topic that brings red blood. Makes you strong, healthy and active. That's what Hollistera Rocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 cants, Tea or Tablets. Even the night watchman works for his daily bread. Don't let the children Buffer. If they are fretful, peevish and cross, give them Hollister Rocky Mountain Tea. The best baby tonic known. Strength and health follow its use. 35 cents. ; ; -r V-T7 T : i f . i I '; THE FINEST AND MOST COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF ' ' " i - i - - - - - - . . Even sEnowin im SMilSMEHRWr Is Ready for yiur inspection and selection DON'T Mi MISS IT. SHY .10 andy Kitchen. oooooooooooooc o o o o o 6 o IN A DAY'S SI30PPING "By Keith Gordon C" C G fa' C o oooooooooodooo She was young and had lived always in the suburbs, where life rolled smil ingly under clear skies, sweet enough, to be sure, but just a trifle uninterest ing. There were times even when she was that little girl when she had crav ed the tonic of the world's uglier moods, burned td see it at its fiercest, as indifferent to human beings as if they were ants. This may have been mere youth and inexperience or it may have been be cause she was surfeited with beautj. Was not her home the vinost imposing in Farville? Inside the. house an exqui site quiet reigned, a sort of hallowed stillness that made her want to shout and whoop in defiance. Her sisters were "the beautiful King girls." She herself, as a . chance re mark had Informed her, was, "the plain one." At the moment she ha felt deep: ly mortified. She hadn't supposed it was so bad as all that. Prom this time her distaste for beauty grew more marked and in one of those heated mo ments that will occur even between the best of sisters had sakl plainly that she was "sick and tired of their everlast lngi beauty! With this observation she had made a rapid but highly character istic departure from the room, and the family beauties had grinned at each other knowingly. "She's a funny little sister," observed Elaine indulgently, a remark that was met by Bertha's" thoughtful "I wonder why she is so bitter against beauty? She's not half bad herself. She's unu sual, the restless little monkey!" And, indeed, this view of her appear ance was shared by" a man who had on more than one occasion allowed him self to look at her the second time, though she was unconscious of his very existence. Her trips to New York in variably led her to one destination, and there he had come to watch for her. ; The mother and the beautiful sisters never knew, any more than they knew her keen interest In the gloomy in teriors visible from the elevated trains, that their youngest was In the habit of rushing through her shopping at the high class stores where they had credit and then betaking herself pellmell to a great Sixth avenue department store, where, as she passed through , the re volving doors, she felt with a shiver cf delight that she plunged into the stream of life'. v The jostling and crowding, the teem ing exhibits that overran counters and were forever falling to the floor, the near silk, near silver and near gold commodities that . filled the place so lavishly, far from ' off ending her taste, stirred her fancy oddly, and she saun tered up and down the long aisles alive with that suppressed excitement that is one of the keenest emotions life had to offer and indifferent to the buffetlngs of the crowd which seemed to her delightfully good natured if a little bit lacking in form. But the spot that she kved best of all was the broad landing of the mar ble staircase that swirled grandly up ward from the center of the first floor with a magnificence that Was dazzling even for a department store. This landing formed : a balcony, rich with oriental rugs and upholstered furni ture, and, most desirable of all, it commanded a panoramic view of the floor beneath. Here "the youngest" often sat for an hour or so at a time, with her chin resting on the railing and her eyes fixed greedily on the scene below, I a fascinated spectator' of one of the best theatrical productions that the big round world has to offer. The man he was an artist, and he haunted the balcony on the lookout for types had noticed that she usually came out of her absorbed contempla tion of. the scene below her with ; a start, glanced in a dazed way at the bold faced clock near by and then fair ly scampered down the flowing marble stairs and melted away in the crowd. Not being a mind reader, he could not know that she was wondering if there was any chance of catching the 3:50 ! or bow on earth she should explain her absence since 9:30 by the purchase of six yards of val lace. But the pfrrrties of her face and head In his" small sketehbo&k multiplied, and the oftener he drew her the more dissatisfied he becamet Always he Just missed catching the spirit of her, the youth, the Interest, the ardor and the Innocence of her glance, of every line and movement, for It seemed to his artist's eye that she was a very marvel of expression. It was about this time that the pub lishers for whom he did more or less work sent him a book for Illustration, and as he read the manuscript It seemed the very girl of the balcony who had wandered Into its pages. By some strange fate the lines that he selected as the pictorial points told a tale. "She stood looking down at the throng below her, bathless, absorb ed,' was one; "Malvern, watching her, recognized that of the thousands she was the one," was another, and the pictures composed themselves In his brain with a precision that could not be gainsaid. J He had watched for ber before with dreamy pleasure. Now hla watching became, eager, 'intense. His fingers Itched to tell the story tell it, as he knew he could, as he had never told a story before. Once, Indeed, she had glanced toward him. with a mute in terrogation that went from his book and pencil to his face. : But he had quickly feigned an absorption, that must have convinced her, for she turned away and glanced toward hiui no more. . " .;. . -if i- It was not until after the pictures had gone from him, not until the ab sorbing work of weeks was ended, leaving his mind temporarily as blank as a room denuded f ojf its furniture, that any doubt of vlhait he had done assailed him. Then,!; with some con sternation he realized I that the 'world is very full of people, la fact that for the past weeks had escaped ; him en tirely. He had thought " of It as pecFj pled exclusively like the garden of Eden simply herself land him. Now a sudden consciousness that his story lay in an open- bojk for others as well as her to ijead, made him tremble. It had seemed the only way to bring her out of Ithe vague atmos phere and into the ij circle of known things. Now he Wondered Lf his method were not too blatant if it would not make her shrink farther back Into the 'crowded outer circle, and with a sort of miserable, hope less patience he awaited the appear-: ance of the book. . "Who is the girl?'! j Kendry, an artist jfriend, was look ing at the proofs, andhe scowled and narrowed his' eyes ip "an effort to re call the face in the! picture before him; then a light dawned and his brow smoothed. - "I say, It's uncommonly like that lit tle King girl,.; the sister of the beau "ties. I didn't know that you knew them.' - -J i . ' . The maker of the jfiifctures shook his bead; with well assumed indifference. "Never heard of th(jm, I think. Where do they live?". J 'i ' His voice didn't sound natural to him self, but Kendry was -absorbed In the pictures and apparently did not no tice. .. I I - "farville, he answered absently, and the other took courage! "That's -a mere face in the crowd," he tossed off airily ! "Found ,it in a Sixth avenue department store. Kendry showed : bis disbelief.' If they have that sort in department stores," he observed, "I think I'll go to one of them to get me a wife." To which his listener had: the temerity to answer: : ;.v M-. ,-d-4a ': "Do you know, the same thought has crossed my mind.", J The next post carried an advance copy of the ! book! fo IMIss Katherine King, Farville, N. . 4- J As she glanced at the pictures she, tingled with delight. The great, swirling! ;ryer of life had caught her up at last, no longer passing her by as If she were but a part of its smiling shore. She swept into ,her mother's room withplit; ceremony. "Mamma," she said breathlessly, "I must, I really must,) go td town tomor row for a' clay's sbbppfng." Something told her, he would be wait ing! . f-j::. f . h Master specials . If you have your new dress and hat ready for Easter the next thing most needful is a Try Our "Perfection" Glove. ' We have them in all sizes and all best shades at $1.00 Pair. ' NEW BELTS, NBW RIBBONS, fJBLV COMBS, EtG, i 'H1 mm Such a Thoughtful Woman. When tlie man and the woman start ed down, the subway staifS the man .felt in his pocket for tickets. "By George! he said. "Isn't that a shame? Tve got to top in all this mob and buy tickets!" J i ' ' Oh, no, you won't" said the -woman. "I have them. VTetj I came down town I , remembered jwhat you said about those people, who buy only one ticket at a time makjng such a nui sance of themselves, so as I had 15 cents to spare I bought three tickets. I have two left. We can go right on through. s - ' So the man and the; woman drifted along with the pushing crowd to the point where the ticket chopper held them up and demanded tribute. Then the woman looked tickets." Suddenly painful blankness. "I I haven't got in her purse for the her I face assumed a iem, she faltered. T was in such a hurry when I came through that I must! have dropped all three tickets into the uptown box." New York Press. I L f Homely Abraham Lincoln, In Colonel Clarki E. Carr's book, The Illini," he teilsl of his first glimpse of Abraham Lincoln and of his impressions of him at that time. He says-: "Rapidly as tne coach had swept by the hotel I hadj noticed that the driver was not alone on his high seat. He had a companion, and before any of the other passengers could alight this companion had flighted, stepping; as it seemed to me, from th6 high coach box clear to the ground! he was so very tall and his legs were, so very long. My first impression ) was that he was the homeliest manI bad ever seen, but as he' moved and spoke this impression was gradually changed.f He was awk ward and ungainly, bony and angular, his body abnormally extendeJ, bis long; legs and arms terminating In big feet IT H TN Hf LOO iv $ tg. a n : n tt r 10 bblsOeorgla Ribbon Onno Ourup for sale at 45 Genis per Gallon Also the Fanciest and FlnostY.lao!; epelw lri the Cltu. F.UI1 line" Fresh & Fancu Groceries alwaus on hand HAST ' JMMISS ST. PHONS 73 S m D- M. MILLER'S His neck was Intended espe- and large, bony fingers. long and seemed to !bes dally toJIft ; his head high enough to survey every, oblectfl about him. His head was covered TTitti thick, matted brown hair." I A Borrlfled Cnbnan. Henry Herman, the English theat rical manager, bad 4 glass eye, which on one occasion ilgured prominently in a joke he played upon a brutal cab man. " '; i -1 "Cabby was driving Herman home to his. residence at Hampstead and on the way mercilessly thrashed his horse. Herman objected to the man's cruelty, says Mr. George B. Sims in his interest ing book entitled "Among My Auto graphs,, but said nothing until he got out of the cab. Haying first carefully removed his jrlass ejre, he .held It out between his finger and thumb and ex claimed: - I ' s ThatB what yoti have done, you scoundrel! Toa have cut my eye out with yotir whip! I shall give you into custody!" - ' ' The cabman gave one horrified glance at- the eye," exclaimed, "Oh, crikey r snd. without waiting for his fare, whip jed up bis horse and drove off at a furioos rate. OUR GREAT APRIL OF 00 o mm XLJ - I I -k. II III.. 1 L . W mum OQ IS SlMEI-l?MEIaI2 Don't put off until Tomorrow vhat it is well to do Today. n 'PHONE p.