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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, , JULY 16, .1881—SIXTEERN PAGES . “Ur ing arrangements at Conoy Beales, the bat to wag since their departure, society daiihts | L don't know who shoe was, but L betieve | Waiting for him to come nearer, the widow- | She was known asa mother of the Order, WOMAN. halr-pull, a how}, and all further tears were Ialand how provide not only n separate part | whether elther of them will retin until | she dled elther from hating lini or loving the | er shouted: and of late years recelved an allowance from oom? Of the pavitton for MOnIeH, but at covered soinething more original shall have caused | other.” 2 “Hello, Brother G., how came you this | tho ‘Treasury, She tved alone in a house on ene in ‘ passnzowny to the water, so that one ls not | thisincident te ba forgotten, f ; yay 7 Podrousse street, and tn her style of practice a plenic party the other dey the youth a Siump Damse! Triumphed | subjected to mate scrutiny, oxcent when the — A 8ULPTANAS MARRIAGE, “Tdrove out, remarked the parson, “1 | wos one of whnt we enll the Teze 1| Who recktesly hugged all the girls was put How 3 reewling aurt inomentutlly uieavers you, ASPNATOIS LOVE-MATCIL down asa free and squeezy follow. Anes. aa a eee oe oe ae ans | sop eans, £8 I” he | ur nae eg Hh apnea te matriago of Nallé Sultana, one of the two vi A word, i CANE ic 10 Imperial brides, was furnished by an Ene With that, the mitister topk front his porket everything is done by moans of herb teas i a tmarringe-license In proper form, and with- | (tsanes), glist lady who was an Invited guest: out Curther discussion the to bugles were | | “Did she work much by meansof charms 2” “On our arrival at- the; house, a Inrge | properly adjusted, and, without leaving thelr “She knew all the secrets of Votttoolsm, building situated up a steep, narrow strect sents, the ceremony was perfornied. i to wit- Including the charms, the influonces, and not far from Dolma Baghtelié Palace, we td yea entle ai whe Wad dr vert out Fitts. fit ye ays of slavery she tae: “ushered by half a duzen cunuehs | ¥! clergy tian by previous arrangemen erful sight of money selling charins wero us 7 with the widow's nety husband, protect runaway slaves while they followed through an nnte-room, {n'wiiel lounged a den all parties drove to the ‘city. The | the North Star. I can’t exactly say where few attendants, into a fine apartment crowd- fitow's Hew husband arent by hor residende pi came fran or Jw she got nto tlio Onter, : F she might pie rave! 2 was in high degreesand was aimigh ed vis Se nrc re sore reateentegitg satchel, and the palr drove toiedepolwhere usofal woman Inher Time. Many yents rind Walt, ag aclvarets bolag ot pat Lies Ashort tine tater, a, steeptng-car had been | when the Asiatic cholera was round, slia ‘ pee Ys aftulr ling yort ever eeu a person with the le- Just beginning to tlre of watching the throng | uy trouble to spread tis Intellizence, but it ia?" ake tle Doctor paeatae when the stir without proelumed tho come | 18 ¥en here aso hint to soine who probably “No, L never did,”. sald the reporter. Ing of tho bridegroom, aman of 8t years of | 2A¥e been deferring n wedding nud the sub- | Well, you necdit wantto, for It is a most Ing of tho brideg y ay sequent joys of life all on accutint of tho ex- | horrible sight. When it comes on you you age, lors and Jnelined a Teenie q vue Ae pense of the nuptials, go jist this way anid tie tostor shaking wanting in a certaln comeliness, Nallé Sul- ike wanan struck by nn Aretie bilzzard. “If tana had herself chosen hiin at the Friday's haan ELLEN TEEEY ih Hunter, fd fee prakon aA dat aaa selamlik, ‘This power of selecting a hus- sonilon correspondent says: The trie es, you dle, dl charm of brine band, by inspection, as it were, Ist privileze | glory of the Lyceum ‘Theatre Is that English re we ean feathers, a a Wheat ene tt f Princesses of the Houso of Otlunan, and | Sarah Bernhardt, Miss Ellen Terry. There | tn ! : 1 ‘ cr) 5 ter thelr nose, and ft would immediately ig carried to such an extent that even | Isa fortune lying In walt somewhere for the |’ and perceptibly abate thateramp. She was If the favored gentleman already possesses | furtunate thentrical manager whocan Induce | very powerful In yellow-fever, too, and, tn Bite no anual, allvored der and “ this resistless encliantress to cross the At- caine Wighty helpful woman In the raras butone at Ienst has occurred during antleQeead ‘i This Binecoy cal, blonertokeat ‘Tho dovtor says that Mme. Leauveau did the latter half of the present century, when | Saxon siren is not a radian Auty, as was | not hol Any offleint position fn the order, an officer was complied, much aginst his | the {l-fated Adelaide Nellson, but she is | Its supreme body meets at New Orleans next will ta comply wit i the custamn, Hedy Tiel something better,—slic tg a charmensc, ns the ua Seite he Will have to go on to attend however, he sourht consolation in keeping | French call any one possessing that pecullar : e Bis isenr e Ina. separate ‘ainblishe feminine—which she exerelses so powerfully MRS. LANGTRY. tu have reached the ears of his Royal part- | —niagnetisin. She ts the most graceful, and | 4frs, Langtry's present appearance fs thus ner, In the present instance, on the con- | withal the most iinturally graceful, woman | deserthed In a London Setter: 1 aaw Mrs. trary, Mehomut Bey was yuite ready to cm | that 1 have ever seen. ‘Tho Ilthie movements Langtry the other evening at the opern on brnce thie hanes whieh ote oer al and artistic atthtudes of Sarah Bernhardt | the ocensien of the first. performance of Ra- Camp uncertaln of promotion, he suddenty | Would scem forced and artificint bestde that | hinsteln's opera of “I Demonlo.” She sat finds himself the husband of his soverelgu’s | Inburn charm and linrmony of gesture, un- | with her back to the stage during tho entire sister, a General, and Itglness to boot, iis | studied and perfect as the ripple of till | evening, having evidently.come there to be Appearance was the slenal for afrantic rush, | grasses or the swaying of the branches of a heen L not to 8 The Jersey Lily lool to which he responded by scattering quanti. } Weeping-willow beneath a summer breeze, | Beh, and not to see. Lhe Jersey Lily looks ties of silver plastres dn olden days they | She is¢pure womanly, every inch of her, | Worn and faded, and her palegray tollet would have been golden liras) among the | She cannot be awkward, even when she | incked the showy splendor that used to chare slaves, ‘The bridegrouin having passed into | tries; and 1) saw her try the other | acterize her costume In former days, the Sultan’s presence, the ceremony of mar- | night “ In the “Belle’s “Stratagem’?; | never admired her, even when L first saw riage was. linmediately performed, but only | but. instead of trunsforming Letitia | her in the ve: ight of her renown, witnessed by the Sultan's mother, It mere- | Handy into a country holden in] How any fare ‘could be considere Jy consiated in the Imam tying them together | accordance with the text, she only suc- | handsome with that broad, — heavy with prope, and declaring them man and | ceeded in assuming a pretty esplegierio that, | Jaw was to ime o-mystery, And then wile, Directly this was over, Mehemet | had I been Dorlcourt would have driven | she always lacked the supreme cliarm of Pache escaped by a site entrance to avokd | nie to cateli her straightway in my arms and | beauty—namely: unconsciousness. whether being mobbed ‘and butteted, according | Kiss her, declaring that she was charming | rent or felgned, “She ts always. attitudiniz- to the common practice of the slaves, | auyhow. Ot the stage Luin told thutshe ts | ing and always on the lookout for aduirers. who must have been appensed by unlimited | quite as fascinating ag when before the foot- | ‘The Prince of Wales aroppod in to visit her Dacksheest. As soon as the doors were | lights... She has pro the extent of her | {none of the entr’ actes, but his Hizhness thrown open the whole mob poured helter | powers of enchantment by successively win- | had a cold in hts head, apparently, ag he skelter into the inner chamber, where the-| Ming and wedding three husvands, all of | passed nearly.the whole of the pertud of his bride was sitting in state, with a sister by her | whont are still Hving, divorce and not death | visit ina series of velement ‘and most wn- side, All the slaves, and also the few Arme- | hav! ‘eleasedt her irom tivo of them, In | royal sneezes, The beauty of the present nan ladies who had been invited, bent hum- | fact, tis reported that while walking in | London season ts said to bea Mrs. Siinpsan, bly down and kissed the hem of her garment, | Grosvenor Gallery the uther day with her | who, with her Insband, tins just returned ‘but with us she shook hands without rising, | preseut spouse, Mr, ‘Kelly, she caine face to | froma five years’ residence in China, There. and motioned us to chairs very nenr her, A | face with her two former husbands, who | is also a Miss Grahant, who has a most lov fair, sweet faced woman of some twenty-two | who were promenading there together, and | ly face, but who spolls her very undeut summers is Nallé Sultana, She was dressed | that the only embarrassed persone of the | charms by the too. free use of cosmel in a loose fitting Turkish robe of rosecolored | quartet was Mr. Kelly; and they do say that | However, I think that the epoch of profes. allk slashed with gold, while a long white | thy law will soon be ‘called into requisition | slonal beauty in London goclety is pretty gauze vell, likewise embroidered with gold, | to brenk the bonds that unite her tu her pres- | mitch atan end, which is fortutinte for so- drooped down from behind the Nttle cap that | ent spouse, and that she will then become | ciety. surmounted her tightly drawn up hatr. On.| the wife of a prominent English actor, ‘Truly her shapely hands ond bosom sparkled mag- | tis wonderful and interesting Indy ought to HAWAITAN FLOWER-GIRLS. jitecnt dintionds. Persinels button Kloves Hey lt her weilding-ring the motta sald The Hawalinns are. passionately fond of iad burst In fastening, and altogether her | to lav ed by ess of | towers. Bevie: . : 1 toilet was fur less perfect nnd rich than we | Desmond on the occasiun of her fourth mar- lowers, Levies of linppy, rolilcking native Over Her Somewhat Emas ciated Companion, But Miss Thiek wot w severe lonking-over b about ity of her own sex, and she aecmett tf Ika it, for of course she knew she wns showing to the hest possibic ndvaniage. Her form would lave Veen perfection if twenty: pounds Helter, and the slight. supernbun- dunes of flesh was hardly apparent in tho Hight striped costume of dark colors, cone trasted with which was the fine akin of hor face, ars, aud neck, :, Thora was no doubt abont it, she was almost ng attractive now as the loss abounding Miss ‘Thin. Sho glanced covertly at the younger girl, and doubtless there way n feeling of rivalry, strangers though they wore. ‘This Is the kind of a sex BAe * AN IDYL AT THE LOUVRE, A. Paris correspondent says: -Isubel Is 0 foreign flower, «production of the Western Continent, but whethor from the great Re- public of the North or froin one of the little Republics of tho South 1 shall not be precise, Ig she pretty?.. That isa question never pos- ittvely nuswored, .At first sight, you would say nota bit; .aftera lialGhour’s: nequalnt- ance inost people pronounce her “adorable,” She was brought to Paris by « fond yet as- tute mother two or three winters back, and made for herself mora- enemies and more friends than any young person of 20 or there- abouts hind ever before made In the same thne, Thera were suttors, too, and serious ones, for isabel was wenllhy, and might have married a ttle with'a fortune, so that society wondered how she fixed her choice upon Mr. E., aman of twice her age, notatall rich, anything but an Adonis, near-sizhted, and, by way of climax to his disadvantages, anastronomer, whose every thought Is «dl- rected to celestial economy. ‘That heshould have snapped at the, match was quite natural, but that she could have consented stl! remains Sheomprohensible, It was quite Ahappy household from thelr wedding-lay untll they recrossed the Atinntic—that 1s, untll the mother and daughter recrossed it, for the husband lias gone on n sclentifie mis- sion eastward—not the shadow of a misun- derstanding crossed their threshold. But Isa- bel was a fantastic belng; she was not satis- fied. with the platonic tenderness of her spouse, and so, while he was busfed in search after the missing Pleinde, studied the theory of ** Les Atomes Crochues,” as devel- oped in a treatise which, unfortunately, Is now out of print, and more's the"pity, event- ually finding hor kindred atom in the person of Gaston veal “ Hanlsolne voile gentleman not exclusively devoted to star-gazin. ‘The result was Inevitablo, but that was mercly an gitar, a3 shia Held out tek, hand fo George incident in the comedy on which 1 Iny no | that sie had been christened * Willian Lor- stress, 13 the sequel alone entitles it to no- mR < A Mone Wee my ae So ci, we | Ue ie Say ale cee a gravest question; she foared the Indiserction | fy AbUERL Of Sutenee dae Nie ete ofascrvantif histooms wera the placa of sake ae developed into a handsome rendezvous; his too freauent visits mfeht | and brilliant woman, he made her his special awaken Paui—tho husband's namé fs Paul— protege. Ho nets cai dooked after hen eile iY verles. They chose an apartment | cation, but took: her. o1 Me ramble Aine tation of evhton ° portion 1 ailittett through the Holy. Land. and. his particular Saya a Washinglon corrspondent:, The rumor that Mr. Tyner liad resisned ns first Assistant Postniaster-General, and that. George E. Spencer, of Alabama, waa to BUCe | eced him, opens the way for narrating a bit of romance In his matrimontal career. Nenr- ly four years ago tho public was Informed of © vory quiet wediling at St. Bernard's, In Now York, Mr. Spencer belng tho contractor on one skle, and Miss Nunez onthe other, and then .came the sudden departure for Deadwoot, the seat of Spencer's warlike operations in mining stocks, Ils brite, was abonuty of the Spuntsh type, very accom- plished, nnd recelved some gorgeous wedding gifts, That story, however, abuut hor mother being a Cuban is all’ wrong, as the writer happens to know. She cama of goo old North Carolinn stock. Her matden namo was Loring, and we no sooner change this name to Nunoz than the romance begins to gather about the lady Spancer married, The brothers of Mrs. Nunez were both celobritics of the Old North Stato tn their day. Theelder, Thomas, was the founder of tho Wilmington Heruld sixty odd years ngo, and died since tha War, after a life of great activity, Tho youngest brother, and the particulnr favorit of his sister, was Will fain, a flue old, chivalrous gentleman, very fond of Jadies and soldlor’a epaulets, and devoted to his sister. Mr, Nunez, a gentle- man of Portuguesa blood and great wealth, wooed and won this sister on one of his visits to North Carolina, and enrried. lier nway to set off the beauty of lis orange groves in Florida, This was about the time the Moex!- can war broke ont. William went Into the service chleily consoled during eatin life by his sister’s promise that the firat child should named for lim. Much to his dis- sppolntinent, the child was: one of ie kind that “dousi’t count,” ag Mr, Domboy would © hive remarked, William fought and hoped, In due course of time there were symptoms that the wish of his heart was to be gratitied at last; and, un- der the ambition of Jeaving a glorious name for the little one to ‘carry after film, he fought so bravely and furtously at the storm- ing of Monterey that they pinned a Major’s epaulets to his shoulders.. Imagine, after all this, the cold chill that ran down the Major’s spine when the news came that it was a girl ‘This was gatting too monoton- ous for tho pationt warrior. - He couldn't ‘be walking Into the cannon’s mouth on proba: ilities; so he hel his sister to her promise that the next one should be named for hin. And named it was. ‘Twenty-flve yenrs later, when the minister called her “May? at the Frotn the steamer’s deck laden with cotton, Ks ‘Al tt iigbcheld a bay is fale Angelica, “my bosom friend is baled Miss Lilliwhtte, who ig about to ma marked on Metorial Day that ano could sympathize with the brave boys In blue, hav- ing lost hor hand inan engagement, Superfluous: “And so you tearn danein [eee a datage EU nah ' e vory well my: but [think a girl's rathorin tha way pee ! A Providence girl, on being told, that ho false halr was coming off, reptlad tint it wat ho stich thing, ns she didh’t wear false hair, And then went and louked in the mirror. Brown (Pillstine)—" heard It was nll! off? between you and Miss Roweshett.” Wot binson (esthote)—" Yn-as, Incompatibility oF comp lexionI—she don’t sult my furnlt- Quney Island Bathing-Houses Not the Bxolusive Places: They Are * Thought to He, 4 Parla Nowspapor: Yarn ‘About an Amorican Brido and Mor Loy. i «or Wold, The Interesting Olronmatances Connected “~~ with a Sonator’s Woolng and (Wedding, Ife was altting in the parlor with her when ® rooster crowed in ‘the yard, and, leaning over, he sald: Chanticteéer.? “IL wish you would: Lain as sleepy as £ can be.” He eared, ‘They were at a dinner party, and ho re- marked that he supposed she wag fond of othnology. She sald she was, but she was Not very well, and the doctor lad-told her not to eat anything for dessert but oranges; The winds were wiisperiftg low and tho sentinel stars had set thelr wateh in the sky 6 she lene from her chamber window aud tenderly asked: “Is that you, Henry?” “ Coursh ‘tiz; pretty ‘oman dozzen know er own hushband when sh’ seeziin.’? Can any boily tell us why a woman, emerg- Ing from ncrowded car, ‘always makes be lieva ste Is going to getout at one side of the Vittartn, untit two or three men hava _ lumped aff in the mud, and then stops off at the othor side? She niways doug it; and wa Want to know the reason why, Sho heard the angels cniling her From that celestial shores Shu tlopped hor wings and away sho went To makvone angel more. “And jonrriag, what Is it?" £ heard hor {m« And straight T roplied, trough the half-oponed “Tis one man the less, mF and one woman tho Pilladelphia Furnishes a Romanco Composed of Tivo Hen, One Woman, and a Park, purrtage of a Sullana—A Psychological Wonder —Rematks at Weddings, Etc., Etc. HER ANSWER, For The Chicago Tribune. My heart crics for you, but my Ips ara mute; ‘What master-hand can mond a shattered flute? sy Prince, L:Joved you welt—too well, I truw; For what doca love c’er bring but honvy wo? The summer swoot has fied with star and sheen, ‘fho drifting anow fa dendly cold I weon; And what can mako a dead rose bloom aratn— ‘What falllog tears, what rand despnlring pain? Across the bitter apace T cry to you: (Ab! Love must over wear tho thorn and rue!) hold out empty arms of grief ond luss— (Wo reach tho light thro’ shadow of the cross), Idaro not meet your glowing sombre oyos— ‘Thro’ sorrow I bavo grown most sudly wiso; Idsro not fee! your IIpané warm as wina— My Princo, was nut that summor half divine? ‘That summer dead, with dawns of amethyst, And sunsote which the crimson sun had kissed; The nights that biossomed intv purplo bloom, With IlMosswaying, starry, in tho gloom? ‘Tho warm, swoat fragranthours—ah! what hath fo Burlington Hawkeye: One day this sum. mer we rade fifty miles In a railway ear, seat: ed behind four men who were playing with those awful: playthings of the devil—cards, ites: plasedd euchre until they were tired of It, ‘They’ played a little severi-up, pedro, and occasionally 8 trifle of poker.’ We never heard adispute. ‘Thelr bursts of merriment occasionally at some unexpected pluy re- peatedly drew our eyes from our book, They hever quarreled and never called names once. after we got out at our station we sat at the window and watched a party of young men and inaidens playing croquet, In fifteen min- Utes we saw two persons cheat successfully. Wo heard the ong player who did not cheat accused of cheating tive times. We heard four distinct bitter quarrels, “We heard a - benutiful young girl tell two les, anda meek- looking young man three, and finally we saw: the young: girl throw her mallet -against the fence so hard that it frightened a horse; tho other young girl pounded her mallet so hard. Drought to you half so swoet in all tho strife? Aad now we walk apart with ompty banda, And winter broods o’er all the barron Janda. My Princo, what lore can put the thrilling note Of riant song into a dond bird's throat? ‘What rapturous longing, what remoraoful wo, (an mako Love broathe—that died long mouths ogo? - Fanny Driscoi TWO WOMEN BATTERS. ‘Writing from New York, 9 correspondent mys: Ithas been bubbling, secthing, sput- erlog hot here. I went to Coney Island yes- sterday, partly to let my body get cool and partly to see what was goingon In the fashion G 23 s ellinb the stil i al - zs sarc Tenw Datty wlio ‘were evidently not hotel, so called, It was inlca and convenient, fag, Mile aPrappolitmenty wo raante Sears pean music in’ the courtyard. the whole Tithavo tive, cholcest spectmens, and, haying gathered | ot diferent doors, and the two young men excursionists for a day, but were going to looked sheepish and went off after a drink. one of the big hotels fore longer stay. ‘The affair was n confession of the econuiny now enough to supply the market for the day, Now, why is this? Now, sitap, uiake jastgngih purchases, to wexve | MOHOE Nfeeo Of the Major's, andl, with his | HUSA S cotaesan Dales "gy REMARKS AT WEDDINGS. they dash down to Honolulu, rlding horse: slop, niake Just eno h purchases to serve | wife's ngslatnnce (notice how delicately this interesting member was a girl, whose travel- | asx blind, go out of tie other door, rin i " J y The following remarks have mostly been baek, fashion ft. The Ge Aer eae al tog dress Hilustrated tho latest fashion in that | stairg, and, aftor a.too short Interviow with | Hbwacepi a tany boardingchouseinciinten |, neyeroroGical WONDER: | snld tine utter tue at nil our" tony weds | Le (han futisuaae s ferrilie ipa, They ERIE AND WELLAND. Une, Her dress was made of thin woolen | Her Gaston, como back and beg her husband, | and {aor and it’ beeanie hendquarters for | There isin Virginia City a young lady | dings, and willbe sald again mulagaln on | “leis” or wreaths of Hower, whieh eneirele stu, n great deal like French: bunting, dark | Wloalways walled pationtly In the couvs | the Virginia and North Caroliia families |'whoso ense isnot only the most distressing | avery such occasion: thele foreheads and hang suspende Prospects and Ponalbilities of the Rival drbinits main color, and bordered with a | petit chon so rong awaiting.” “Paul oniied Whe tiated New, Lorie ddery, the two | hnaginable, but-which also 1s most suirlows;| tore she ruta Inthe olden musth Suspended Treaties | Frederick a. wanket hn itarjere Maven for Aunvst stripe. of bright Madras hues about four | and suid: Never mind, Jove, Z was quite | ped a Mr. eed, and the yresent Mrs, | 80d a puzzle for physicians and all who are Who nlule hor dross? heck, also, and flowing din thelr baeks are Whether the facilities of the Welland Canal {nches wide.- This gay border made the girl | 1! wale with fnew | pamplilet: ihe ans Spencer, lived and dazzled, and entertained. | acquainted with her condition and the pecu- | 1s it Surab sitk or satin? great streamers of “tnalle” wreaths pucked | for passing oceat-built vessels really exist 13 aconspleuous object, but sho hnppaned to | {attered immensely af tho endearing appolin- | diss May (short for Majo) was the name | Mar circumstances attendant upon and con- | Is tier veil rout ince? Fou & dellcously fragrant and ber | a matter of doubt, Every boy Intrusted witl fs ‘2 {ion “little cabbage not being accustomed | she always went by amon her friends. Both | nect A therewith. ‘The young Indy is a Migs | - 520’8n4 white ns tho walt petually green exotle, without - the On ery boy Intrusted witt bengentcel, shy, stendor creatura, as well |-to such «tender title, ng his family and thosisters wera very accomplished. Mrs, | WoCtes therewith, young Indy is 0 Mis Wouter how much ho's worth? aid of which no Iawalian, belle is | thosaleof a horse knows that ho will “eat 4s pretty, and the bright color was simply | schoolmates’ used to’ call hin “little Reed singing then a clear, ERwuELL contrite | Mary Konney, aged aboutts years, who re- | Did ho give her those dlamoude? roped In the hight of ashton. Arrived In Ils head off” If he is kept too long before irking on her, while on some persons It pig. allusty ly fo tho Incorrectness of | to the Major's soprano, ' Misa ,May had va- | Sides on the Divide.’ Provious to her tIlness Hen aera ty death Honolulu, the flower-girls select soine shatled | clostug a bargain. Every reasonably well- would have beon appallingly loud.. What ts | 2/8 gates. ne fo it went jot Lor rlong athor attractions ‘besldes music, stich | sho was a pupll in Prof. Filnt’s school, | hat truins whore shapot . hook or corner along, the public streets, and | Informed shiipowner knows that good returns saice for one goose in fashion isn’t always | then someting, Pnabody Was tte wiser, and ts.0 tall, graceful figure, handsome manners, | where sho wns distinguished for hor close Jane hor mother n dowdy? ith by sea daclkalzest fie uot, Mostar: stdom expected unless the vessel ins 03 a of ree 1d - s . des ¥ § § \s 5 § iq e. Wuce for another goose. Tho stripe was | inces, whera lic was obliged to remain three wove bie in rene Hentai at ‘ony come Appltcutior to her studies and her aulet and | atts ahandsnmeustoe them tozether until the let bs com ons capacity ns there are miles in her hiylshty used for plaited flounces, of which | months, to the despair of Isabel, who was so- mand of Spanish, French, and Portuguese, | !dylike deportinent,: Sho was ambitions to | finsn't hun cute Httle hand? soon ag the girls et fairly at work t voyage, ‘This “rule-of-thumb” hoy applles there were three on the skirt; and there was slanaly contemplating, tha jfimamament of & | Among her adimirers.at that time was Maj, | become n teacher, and studies very hard In Wonton ott -nuyaber her i are? Jels with surprising, rapidity, and ‘spread | to ocean steamers ug well, very few of this tho a tunic with some of thostripeon ft. The Soe ee ren ner miata mn laeies oui the Kulley, inte Mayor of Flghmond, one of the order to be able to pass an exainiiation. | [foe Mitten parted in the middted them out fantustiedily so as to attra | craft for the Atlantic service now belug cun- Some six weeks ago Miss Kenney told | Wonder what on earth she murried bim for? | | Breatest attention and invite the 1 tunfe was de . . " lvep, forming a double apron her mother and others that arent eatamity For ils money, of course! public to patronize them by its must Platonle absent one, Hoe would be back to-morrow by | how near lie eame to spoiling Spencer's mls- structed of less than 2,500 tons measurement, draped in a curve of numerous folds. ‘The | tho 11:40 a, m; traln, and, “at3-p, m., where t t the ‘brunet or s iY 7 form, and thelr love-chants are usually suc. | On the chain of the great lakes this rule tit trimming reached up'to the’ knees;-and | you know, with a thousand kisses."?- “Phe let- Heat wad hint teh Boon i toneued was soon, to bofall hers. shat allawould be | ent ho ban drome| 4 hedgehog} cessful in drawing custont. At the time that | would require vessels of 1,261 tons from Chi- then came two kerchlefs, sawed together, and | terwas dated on the day before; and it was | Inia the foundation of his fortunes by marry- | Stricken blind, dent, and ‘dumb, Ln matin, He looks Iko wt efrous-ctown! the famous Count Communist, Hen Rocke- | cago to Montreal, and yessele-of 1,406 tons this anmouncement she was much distressed No, he's like a dancing-master! misses ‘( ne. Tiwi! Capltal aud wept bitterly, It was In vain that her | Good enouxh for hhery uywa rs fort, pnsent, thraueh At Tae Gael frlends tried to comfort her; she sald it was | She was always a atuck-up Thing. ered with lels hnd matic wreaths by a charm- athing that must come, A few days Inter, | She'll be worse than ever, now! ing native beauty, while on her way home from school, she was | | She Jitter Sam Somebody, didu’t sho? : then 1 p. m,, and there wag'no tine to be Jost ¥ in valu preparations Ghawvis dressed tea | (zSllss Davis, a wealthy Jowess of Peters- “Whe bur Te re Te aro you going, darling?” | NTs xa took hor fathor’s place in theNew naked Paul who enterod Just as sho put on |. york PostOllies, which lie find. been conte hor bonnet, "To the Pouvrat. wil pr ee | pelted to accept after the War. wrecked hig shitred, up the Ine of tho contre, dividing away from the front, aud draped far over the hipsin upward folds. Crossing the upper part of the tablier, and curving over the hips, from Duluth to Montreal, these figures repre- senting the distance of elthar route In miles. ‘fhe present Welland passes vessels of only: 600 tons, which thus ent thotr own heads ott vite? $ Hind, and was led by the | No, he never usked her, " Jong before they reach Montreal, to say noth- Were stripe-borderod pantera, which lost | Wiiltmo?! "No, not to-day; he Was | splondid fortune in Florida, . Lator she toole | suddenly struck blind, t Hota loft town, anyway, PANISIAN FEMALES. i M, 7] Inher carriage, and had indicated the Galé- " | hand the remainder of. the way home. Four 4, ‘ t é 4 ing of crossing the Atlantle, The only alter- themselves in thebouffantdrapery. Tho walst } rig Rarengo. Before Paul. could finish -his foto ature. doing salut saees with the plisalelaus, Including Dr. Webber, County Fhore, the curomuny has begun. ‘The ladles of Paris Ive ala Grand Setan- | native left 10. the Canadian Govermnent, Was noat-ftting basque, witha plaited pos- | explanation, Ten minutes carlior Gaston had along aud resoued her from the uncertainties | Physician, have buan attending the youn White as bis collar! ’ eur: Not alone that thoy nave their car- | therefore, was to enlarge the Welland and St, fillon back; and th e borderad’ receded hor up, the stairs; Jt wasan ‘Ex. ‘| lady since her {Iness, and have been unable | Why don't.thoy hurry up? riazes for shopping, for travellng, und for | Lawreuce Canals, in order to admit vessels . esi rad; the position day,” and the shop was so crowded of, 8 footliaht carcor. to deterinine the cause of the malady whlch | Did she say sho would Niboy "2 thety rides Inthe Elysian Fields, fashton now | of 1,500 to 2,000 tung capacity; But while the basque, formed tho collar and cuffs, and fan- that he did not heed. the“ Monsieur! toll en hele ok auch a bad’ sors of i ae ¥ - canis are still In process of anlargine, tho cltully garnished tho walst, The wearer wo muduonly seized hor. filer loving her! 3 pore, thos aru meetiod demands that they must have their own rall- Monsteur{”.of one of tho clerks, He passed | in conversation with the writer, “Jle’s very | Sight she soon lost her hearing, and then ler | There, t shipbuitders have constantly Increased. tho looked Iike'a bird of brightbut dainty plum- | the threshold of the abode of bliss, and. had vocal organs became paralyzed. For severql | \Dvesit sho look happy? rond carriages, Our own Mrs. Mackey, trom | sizu of the vessels, so that the Jakes above aw hes rf hee Pity “u 2 7? . | pe r ge. Tho brilliant hues go lavishly used: of | scarcely remarked that on tho looking-giass foie selltoat ail obstinate Jn. continilise thee days past slie has beon unable elthor to hear, (Wian Tivns in tee Glace! San Franelseo, lias her carriage, which is a | Buifato contain numerous ernfts thut are her traveling costumeouly madcher piquant, | Was a Inbel marked ‘11,000 francs.” when matters ho fs-rather obliging, Me certainty | see, or speak, Vhot a hundgome couplet falry patace on wheels, costing her husband | both too long and too deep to enter the Wol- and not at all conspicuous, Besides, the | the door opaned and Isabel was in his arms. hag some strong points of cliaracter, which, Jier disease appears to be of the natura of Bho waa always a sweot little thing. 140,00 francs, ‘Tha Mironess do Rothsehittt | land when itis strained to its utmost, ‘Tho ts Suddenly #- strange, creaking, noise wns ler Wetter cultiyation, could be made very | Paralysis, and this: lind yesterday extended How wrucoruily ehe walkyl travels also In her boudoir on wheels, which | larger tho vessels, the mora profitable they buflness of the style jpwhich the material | hoard, accompaniod by n gpacles of tremblinx | UaotuL” Just so, A mane vive oat soni Nene | £2 HCE legs and tho lower bart of her body, | Dear me, whar airy ss putsont 45, however, not quite as costly ns that of her | become, and eouseauently the linus Halls 3 le uy ve her a soft roundness . Wi ed, " rd T . i ¥ y8 she ut jo us! . Wouldn't bo Jn her place for a farm merienn cow or. Col bs (8 hat curry the grain to Buifilo and the Erle Which no irl of five fect ton in hight and He OO tan aint crow eg eee selt twice to the United ’States Senate, that for fiat, and then only uniter eortain col: Tit bet those Jawola were, hired, * | purehased the pulnce car of, Mime, Mutard. | Canals HA fu.demand wore nnd more, while andonly 5 hundred ‘pounds in welght can | the bedroom, and saw, slowly Teing throngh rauious beauty with & S000 diamond rng, | ditions. ‘Tie most. curfous feature of hor Shell ahs ol Ror Farbor's bands, ue last te mlstress of tho decensed King of Holland, | tho extra expense tor th breaking of Bull: wt Wer present without clothes, In the same | Aaprep anon times tie head, then tha shoul | is “a fool of quailty” at lonst, | Mrs. Spenagt | ¢Rso, howaver, 1s that aul clits time she bias | ho bas a moruaaga on ita DOW: See ie ie: cast blow aees Bato untee | eee ane anBs Shon alban byte thorouat rubies young woman two inehos shorter, ak en wore an aunt ‘ant inieee Se tng Hrould be a cece acquisition to Washing- | rite bereft of all her senses. ‘Tits. she apps ia ee thy tates to enjoy al the comtdrts of home tendeney to hen,” salted sixnehes thicker. She had a handsomer | same from the Provinces, and a shop-vo! 2 : has done in writing.’ Inesking her a ques: | doo snare for him b: 12 While they are tying through the world, ust ut this polnt we are led to note a re~ fice than the other, but, at this tine was | bontingan enormous bundle. Yet the feck, Sunnie Data WOMANGR Hon It was necossnry todo go ih welting, hor | ‘There: toy nro wotting iaretes earriagot Aside from the excessive fare patd for trans: | cent discussion In the Canadinu press in re {(o far from belng as attractive, Lor cos- | ures of the worthy nstronomor were not | ,,.OUTLINES 0: oil?” entd hand being Ind on that of the questioner | - That magnificent dress will be squaaiod! portation, 10,000 franesiuumunily must be prid | gard to the practicability of navixating tho fume did not have half so mich gay cdlor-'| stern or severe; he never glanced toward the You would hardly. bellave it,” sald o during the thue he was writing, This being | ‘The way she docs look at bint the rallway company for keeplug the carriage seean aud the Jukes with tho same bottoms, h yet it struck the evo og vulgar, "Still, | boudolr, but, concentrating .all hia attention | Philadelphia park guardsman, who was con- | done she at otice wrote an aswur to tho J bet sho worsbips bit! aa ‘; in running order, The resultot the discussion 1s that the most Kt wis right in tho fashion. ‘The princk upon the chamber furniture, calculated with | sptcuous by hisred fuce and vigilant whistle, | question, but whilo doing so It wus necessary 1 Vorehip be hanged! she's only making bo- | | experienced seamen declare ocean and Inke dal feature. was a Mother Hubbard | the olerk and tho dowagor the pricy of waim- | «put 1 ted 1,911 teams’ through tho | for the questioner to pine his hand on’ hers | "S085 sina of nice toot marriod, isn't it? CURRENT. POETRY. bottoms fa, be two distinct things,—a deels- Cloak of gray mohair, sober enough in itself, a wedd i Sve count B orto licitiy hold the top of the penell, with Nita eee, ee eae a NO IT THROUGH « | lon whieh the Canndian Government has so gray q ilar arrangement for Suzanne's wedding Xi ehitly NP pe No, it'a n droadful bare. BUNG 1T . 4 Wd not recklesly ornamented with bits: of | installation, which, aa the old lady insisted, | Gteenstrectentrance this afternaon,. Yes, we | Vivien she was writing. Ail this time her | Wosu't ita atupld wedding? ‘A Malor toved a mation go, f far shared a to practically abandon nt pres- Hbbon, ‘Tho trouble about It was that | must not exceed 5,000" “My dear sir}, |- know most of the horses and thelr drivers by | oyes wore closed and her hend restingon hor | wit dowdy drusses! Tia waviike heart was soft as Do. ent the attempt to send doenly Inden vessels Ie shape was unbecoming, for it Gisplayed Wd. the re- seaward, relylug upon the radical reduction iy. er thickness at ths utmost and hi added Paul, “I recommend you particularly sight, but at this season—aftor the infdile of tolls to force a competition with the eaunis iow in stich g position that she could not | Til nover go to anuthort @ bedstead: It lg-of a‘chnate and elugant June—a good many tamMlies go away aud aro : have seon what was doing had her eyes been | I'm just autfocnted) Ho oft would xneel to her and says 4 , 1 . ‘ 3 5 ee etg Hoe waist, So OUBhE | Seete ciate ne aaa eee oe the | Hot out again tll September, but the boys | OPE ae "tae ks young Indy’s is a pe- Gind ite overt “Thou art of life my only Re. oF anghipment pays: 80 wollat Butfato, ment, Though not more than25,sho had } back room, and was debating whut. to do, | hang on and go ita little bit with the horses. | euliar orgnnisin—that sho hus fong been a | Ub coor! - — “ AbL If but kinder thou woulkl'st bo, transhipment ought ‘to pay along the St, i, outing of a fat old dowager, Sho carried | when an invisible hand draw him thither, | They drive fast, too, and usually have ladies | gort ot paychologieal puzzle. Many instances ECCENTRIC WASIIERWOMEN. Aud sometimes aweetly snille on Mit Hayerutied ioe. red canals now. ee a red satin parnsol, which {imparted a | and Gaston, quivering with rage, asked the | with them. Somoof these wo know by sight, | might be given ‘of this pecullarity, but they Alat Me fi 1 Ryitested by 71 ave ad wauned fo the same sta oF complet an at foulsivo redness to her taco, already hot | meaning ofthis intrusion, and how ho got in, too, for they come often enough, anda new | Heurly all concern persons well known here late Mexican totter says thatthe Mexican “Thou art my Ifo, my gulding star, the Welland must till thelr bouts from the eat the weather, and on the back of hor | “ By the lift,” sald the clerk, who then ex- face fs some times'noticeable Wien It comes and who do not wish to have thelr names | women, like thoir most remote ancestresses, Tlove thou near, L love thee Fa. ureue ons at Slneston. laying npyer yet sad was a bright cardinal straw hat, almost plained that during. the Vicomte’s absence Mh als een hich wo know | Wnntloned. As regnrdsthe charnetor of these | perslat in washing on a stone—" losa de lava- “My passion E eannot contrat, peait aed to oneont ced Ati tins Weathanet ot high, surrounded by a huge wreath of | the shop had hired all the second floor of the | With a horse and carriage whic! Y | things, we may say thatshein several instance, | dera—on thelr kneus at tho side ofastrenm, ‘tou urt tho idol of ty Sol. y i hotel for its furnishing departmont, and had | woll.” . “ Bot notified the formor tenant, of whose ad- “ Good-day, str,” and the guard nodded to ress the manager was ignorant.“ Nothin, hort stout f about-imlddle age, who but brass can snvo us,” thought Gaston bch ystonhy pee: ak ge a ‘recommending Isabel to bo eatin, he immneut: | passed Inan English dog-cart drawn by a Pilane ostrich feathers, aud red-Ined in {ts ui, Now, the handsomor of these two females was almost repulstve to look at, Mille the other was highly attractive, and on account of thelr dress, One could felt. Impul, led to:go to persons who were has worked out its own financial and com- or Sf at home, still Inthe same positions on merelal ralson etre. i Heke nnd thot i Fee Coiba oie: Previous to the recunt reduction of Cana- adh tolls the prospect was’ that the most lms strangers to her and tel were for their good, and witeh made thelr the pena atone slab, we oat water and How en you gu on thus? Ob, Lal" iair almost stand on end for the reason that | vei le soap—often with only a spoua- : her revelations showed that she knuw nlinost td herb, called “zncate,” and they rhise Tho Major rose from hen(lou. kuee, mediate effect of the enlarged Welland Mey Wear what the other couldn't, | ately pulled his hat down over his oyes and | fino bay, "Lo comes’ most. very day,” tho | gyery action ot thalr lives. In speaking of “paten,! P And wont ber fathor for to Sl, Would be to bultd up the ports of Luke On- free hours inter I saw thom 4 if protended to ‘be ongaged In measuring tha | guard sald, turning tothe roporter, and ho’) some persons she sald she know overy action le Wes Pe bi arilebite Uitte sls turlo at tho ux perso ot j{houe pen, Lake H the bathing pavilion at Brighton | walla: -Paul and his relative ontered. @ I4- hag a good tenm, but itis only lately that he.| of tholr lives from childhood, Another curl | tan asmall “dug-out” or ru » Owlng ‘THR GUILELESS PARSER, Evlo—a very natural result of bringing the Beach, costumed for the surf. ‘The | abel!’ exclaimed tho trio; * my dear aunt,” 4 " ous thing remains to be told, to this slow process every family of four or | A farmornnd sovon daughters, Erie tevel down tu that of Ontarto, and not att ono had gained greatly on: tho spare | exclaimed - Isabel, ombracing. her with | /28 driven alone tn It, “Chere was a woman, | ON Got Hull, fully hult nile from the res- | flye persons must have two or three Inun- |” And butltttio olve he uur: dropping It to the level of Montreal, What- 00 In appenratice, but was silll 8 litte bes effusion. “How. ‘comes it. that you ‘are | alr, whocameherelnat winter whon snow wns | jqsce of. the} irl, aru two persons Who ap- | dresses, and even then ft is diMcult to got | And the wirts all bud good appetites, ever commerce thus refused to stop at Luke Mod, Atiss Thin had oviduntly proparedher | hera?*” asked the husband, — who lind | on the ground. Protty? ‘Yes, sle was one | pear to bo affected through her One of | ogg turtiod lider taro Or {lire Week “And timus were very bail, Erlo would stop at Lake Ontario, ¥ tho fitdrobe caratully for this visit, and hor | a* vague ion that (ho. Had mot af. | of tho prattlest things:1 over saw. Sho nl-| them Isa boy about 6 years of nge and the | Clothes returned un hreo weeks, 4 grent benelit of Charlotte, Oswego, ater 2 yngtreas, like her traveling-dregs, wasin | de —— somewhere. “1 wanted to sur: ways camo with a young fellow; sonia ono | other ninan of mature ‘age. — Siice she hing | In fact, the woman of the lowerctass seom to | 49 prinea tho country, papor town, and donebure are thee ye nits the lntest atyle. As sho emerged front her | ‘prise Suzanne,” reviiod the wife. who, by Jawyer di t , i sho been stricken down these persons have felt | have no idea of the Inpse of time, for they ‘Towsay tn hls cellac’s molt transfer wight be readily bundy he IE: Talue-rooin she wus scrumptions, indead; | this time, was'as cool as a cucumber, “And | sald ho was o lawyer down town, and slo | overy chango that have takon piace In tho atop n dozen tines a. day to smoke and fetal uldduti, henge witent can senboard, w large proportion of Aner, be ‘costume was of crea white twillod | Sf, de—?" putin te old Indy, who recog- | Was always Inughing and talking os they | young Indys. conditions have Ruown it lite alp, yet they nre, after all, good, harmless | Seven keys of rod, red gold. '* can vesseld passing throne tia We init 16 fannel, trimmed with red, and unlike the | nized Gastonnt ono, for thelr estates are | drove by me, After awiillo I uaed to ox-| atanily, She line hid frequent convulsions,-| gals. Mexican families who, have been In : Uueie ports 1h the future as 1 the ast. An ay, sliapuluss things usaully donned for pdjoining meat faci. Gaston covered ls | pect them on fina days, for they always came | aud W Ean ae Ge ioe fits aa golzcil her | the United Sintes- and, Amurlenn col-.| Me thouuut he knew numer nature, gut, oven with the situation as lt vas berore ve \~ Or, J ier ‘and fone Tt openud in SON ae Ay aa ee ag ad oat ‘is Hea pose about the samy time In the afternoon, AViint someway been Mane ereot the fact Ao, onl Blea z dae: ba ue hss a: when ‘down the suventh rope-ladder be tha tolls, the actual damage to G iék under @ narrow, reversoll collar, lilled | the gambling tabla; ie must enrn_ his livinue Was she ike? Obtshe was a lttle thing | whonever she was seized with a svoll ut | bronalit Hore, pit 10,10 plitrmose. ‘these | , SMW lopo hls suyonth valld. , | ports upon Lake Erle, Butlalo tneluded, + al h a rufiie of red flannel, At the y q the . improvements now, and was a mera employs; madamo had | and go bundled that you could only sco her | vomiting (which spells were quite frequent) ee women detest .the “modorn fiolps” é | Was problematival, (for. the knwasa finfahing band of red three Inches kindly felgued not to KRow Hin; inght he | face, but that was white aud dolicate, and | the fact was instantly known to the two pel- tee man dato Wo tha lonpelnuuiied td He le cxtramaly Hoabifut n fit its Mary ike Rlyar. and i ne he Hey tiled elbow-sleaves terminated in | trust that the others would be equully char- | her eyes—ahu seemed happy, and thoy never | sons at Gold. Hill... In ardur to prove iis, | eye ge ueaetlly fs Woy dl punetuatity—why | rgteahe dima his fourtoou grandobildren, Lae art trae rer re getieematy eae ratte algeile edged with ared band, and the | {tablep?.-.- er : cared. tuch for othor people, One day he parsons. Interested fy ty is curious business | theso laundresses have no tden what it | Aud suyon suna-lu-law, firsgtica eS urfan Hof ByG ty | ke auave tt f -eathored ‘trousers cante Just below the | Paul waa not quite porsuaded; the story, | came here alone, and-I never saw hin after | have made many qulck trips from Gold HU | means, For exmuple, an American (they . ny the lial He gion pac rats via the Ontario Bie A deavy red woolen tassled cord | ithen trovata, did not seam. vero, and he | that, It was along in: the spring when sho | to the Divide, earefully noting tho thie, aud Impose more on us than on their own (TITE NOSTON DIP, tes ee a ahee vd rats via’ Ontario yuled “her ‘sinall waist, On her head | frowned incredulously, although the real | came again, but this time it was with this | always found that the man and boy hind ex- | people) may give a-waslivoman his linen, 0, tho pleasant loston dip, : iad to fears aud oe wwe A funny 28, 7 rubber cloth. . was | shopmian, who had been tipped linndsomaly | man you just saw, ‘Thon I got to know lim; | actly flescribed.the young lady's condition, Three or four weeks miny elapse and Ut ts not " Dreatiy dipt a a OeEAte Wad ian bederod and yet itlly placed. Herstockinga were also red, | by my huro, did. come opportunely to. the | he used to stop and ask mo how many car: a! = returned, He faneles It has been stolen, ety y lp carey whemand (| th awe en Tanah eS ee ae ee nndiane eaey Wet feut were cloth Slippers. ‘The | roscue, sonding Gaston down by. the liftto'| ringes :had guno In-durlng the afvernoon, ‘MARRIED IN- A‘ BUGGY, Not at all, ‘The victlm will, on investiga | 4# throug! molodions mensuros merry men tt | theeeten Thole present cauala wero baile aaiiing reader, by going oaretu ly over this | the lower. story, where, hie sald, he waa | Yes, the care quite often togothar, Not ‘all tho love-smitten patrs who wed- | ton, find tlint the laundress, having been Ine . maidens skip; Pia i pie Se Ne atures i unitate hina war uuu | tmau at Shee amon ana | yatra a uaa s uated ae HHL HEL | nowadays aro" ‘unin af tho aye of | eed yt ivatiig @ taew op a'bull:| We thar grat onatoctonn, | Hae ach Cony Na tes Wy a itt at & tho VG! ation should ‘Was puss! . a wvned his clothing to mona: low ithe, Her’ extremities from aves to F Liner ne convontlonallty In weddings as a Indy and | {leit ‘ners Yor the festlvooveasiane IC MIS, | tow cates in nintuuns they salanm to tha tunes, | filled. Lneplte cf thelr boasts of ‘superior bo made, and go: next morning, bright and | with the day and the park laws governing n and from elbows to fligers, were of o and the facllitics connected thore- cnrly, proceed to the Louvre and wired | fast drivi Then ho resumed the romance, | gentleman of Loulsyille, who became one In V Uitera this fate iio need not‘be | Moro quict thua tho Irlub vieudoonsl a i ae . foeatem _Hlenderness, to be atires but ithe for a Jerk payne Goatai yaw will ‘a wutch nocitod to be of absurbing interest 16 | nay only. a fow days'atiice, C& Woll-towla aanueny patistce lana ie ecbanry: he jaw thoy awa said ald, and allp— With, thoy are constantly desnanding the trees e u with the sh: nalgur: Gasi 18 glo A 3 te) Y : ". 1 0 tf ees puekerings, und other contrivances, 80 | auawerdd~tho’ discreet. forvonaae. who | tut Soe Tee eee ooking fab and fovial, Bid rodoomn: ALE Ate feo the pawnalion | Aad tho wlory'at excuteteon and Of station dle | wid shown by’ the treaty proposed by the ih Tata inated and withal a widower, drove one afternoon Hon, George ‘Brown In. 1874. ‘They ara ever old, ut 8 stands” near: ‘the -entrance, and . to ook ae past the restience of a falr young widow in | Wntl lg fs warn enough to come out ‘As thoy skipy'skip, aktp, akip, akin, demanding thls treetom. tn, * agcordance she was bawitehing In the highest: des fre fd was Whom the -dollcate altuation.” had cbeon | cart: and T cou to oF seo that se had changed, ‘Thon Miss ‘Thick camo out, and wast} square ull her customors. Theard of a | » hall i ” Hea mastert Nothing of the othr ube confided: Sure snougl there: he “was, | She never talked much now, although he | whode graces ho flattered himselt he -stood Sea enor a leneuizead uated th elothes Cd Pactra aN ae tg yun the Preatyof Washington? whereas bat eke no, Indeedy! She wore a woven | and it was he who, with ai engaging amily, was always talking ta hor, Her father? No, | well, and soon ‘one buggy held them both, | an American to a family In which there was Aa thoy trip, trip, trip, teip, trip, ty trip, they, elon inn ablecia foree: tlie atane tore. sult, af the sort I had seen Jn the | tried‘na pair of Derbys on tho hand of tho | ho wasn't that, and one day a strange thing | ‘The buggy went rolling over a turnpike road | acnse’ of sinall-pox that the mother might To the mualy of tho Boston-oxton dip: Xi vy York to open her’ wutesways free dae gut had aupposed no woman would | Jealous astronomer, Paul .was staggered, | happencd, ‘The young foliow, the lawyer, loading from the city, Notan ides entered | bawn ‘digs to get tedivine fora sick child, ‘ a tu f vanes: “Thorefore, with & new Wels ited Rppear in, Lt was strived liken zebra, | and he was still mora shaken when he caje | you know, drove up, I hadn't seon him for iY is f ROUGH ON THE OTHEN FELLOW, » orate Ha Minply drope vessels ta Ontario, Piblovkc ‘and’ dark gray, but tho dines rau | baeeiatig sfternoon, and when, afters fort. } a tong thing, and he reined up tu speak to me, | the mlnd of the’ fascinating , widow that this THE DEAD VOUDNO QUEEN, ~ I kuow thosweotheart of my frlund Ta a eae gtilt roa alle with exe aigliwise, and theroford had the effectof re- | night, he found the'man Whoin. he feared | and while he was, waltlne sho drove up In | waste bo more, eveutful drive than. the | 4 4, {egram from Now Orleans announeln, Before he kuow her; as aeel Dae aee confronting thei at Mon- Mywe Her size, Ie wus steoveless, and hor | might be his rival always at lls post. the dog-cart. No, she wasn’t alone. 2 ino- | others that had taken plage during thelr Joye- elceerAny NY, "i Dut know hor simply asa frond, Tree end pilot feos down the Guilt of St, ith tapering, dimpled arms wera os | ton had been ‘as Wise as a serpent; he fore- | tioned the young fellow to look round; then | wiakwg, but so lb proved,» -, : the death at 8 of Mario Leauyeau, knownns rAbit did ict ues bors treal, ands pilav: fous Caaf art mek oor LE beni tlt as wax, {twas rounded out inthe | saw what miightand what did happen, and | tholr eyes inet, but sho turned hors away, aud Her escort, after leaving tha city out of | tho Voudoo Queen, was shown to Dr. J. B, 3 ate dawerenees th lo at any advautage over tis ne show the whiteness and plumpnegs | stuck bravely to his place fora whole month,,| wy young friend drove away without sayl: sight, broached the subject of blenudlng their Hass, tho New York practittouor of Voudoo- I loft the swoetbourt of my friend | Eno route, Once lat tus Toute Teasonas te fines where her shapely neck joined | during which tle the logs of lia fortune was | unything. . This was some time iu Maret, 1.) future lve ot" sharing that HEY fam. ? ; ati For olties distant; 04 bly enlarged throughout the Emplro. Slate; i pak, Her face was lovely, For ‘thy | spread about and the éleguntes camoinshoals | anw her unly a fow tlues afterward. She | throughout fife: Sha: lent & hot unwilllige “T knew 1," antd the Daoto! 1 But with mo still, iu quenchioss droams, «| Snne end ingurance rates be kopt with- Ai 8 wir had already driven out the heat. to buy from their former guest, Yet, when | rode then In on open carriage, aud ‘was | var, and wanted: to-know when such great Iknew her well,” sald tha Doctor, push- Bho was oxisteat: -<.- 5, in bounds; let ati further reductions 1n eqylveh, and hor black lair was closely | a man has n revenue of 104 000 francs por an- | propped up with pillows, looking very bad. happiness could be consummated, > ing up his epectacies on iis forehead and r Oa! eae toll result as did tho abolition of the Novel at the Lack uf her perfect head, ‘Che | num he cannot go on indedinitly asacounter- | 1 saw hor 80 once oF twice, and ouv thnoshe | Why not now?” quked ue, .& | rubblag his grizzled head; “she was: a fa- IT mot the swoothoart of my friend svost-bound salt Ina reduction of soventeey: kup skirtclung to her figure, which was jumper, wherefure ho took another person, | bowed to me just a ilttic, * Then Caaw noth] What, today PR i so, <* | moug doctor when I first went to New, Ore eal 4 Faas get 9 Sy aia hate cents n ton, or huléa cent ona Yon nu shinpe by one of the netted corsets in | Infs notary, Into conlidence, and the announce-.| bug more o her, -and the old follow came | ** Yes, at Ouce,? aS we Jeans at 18 years of agus but Ldtd not think Aud 'passlonatuly wo eubrycod, bushel of wheat, thoreby extending the gral fei {is summer, Krom a point several | ment of 8 Wealthy relative’s death ut Inst re- | along in the dog-cart as he did to-day, On “ Bechuse," aad she," T-hayen't on my years of agu; Gur facca burolng. ~ : : Earley” EADUGRES ter die eerie ee lowes ules es below the smallest Hno ot her waist, | stored AM. de—— to that society of which he | day jiu stopped here to tx his harnedd, “Ha ' alread’? -* ‘ 4 , she could be as old as 08. Shy had a power : erritory | tri Y, a le used to be go brilliant an ornament, Allthis | chatted with me a moment or two, aud IT gald happened last November, and there never | I had missed of Jute a lady whu used always has been any outward and visible sign that | tocome with him, 3. , ‘ er ae Poul had learned the truth of the matter, Sut +f 'Yes,' sald he, ‘sho died threa weeks Madame ond Monsieur have traveled Inoppo- u ve Teaching not quite ta her knees, were Bolsers Gt dark gray flannel. Lon, euluck: at ‘thy une striped material as the skirt Pieted the wult, tor she wore no shoes, the new ilress, Hi ae F dart of America’s “Oh, well, thas will, maki ledgo of the human system, how: TITTENS, ..- tance Weatward into the hart o: ca’ It Tea vel a tert fo, dlterenes, ane Tu ene what tu Wa. to op ‘oll. Ur ‘A Rhode falayd wooin Went to the como | Frauary; let Now York conse to exnot a visi Just then the Noles of.a rapidly approach- | cure any kind of slcknves.” iat em her fourth | ble qld pro qua for every canal expenditur ae ft , ny Durwy Was Heard, and Wookie, back the on ay, sha ealted Queen In the Voudao tre cheeh teak Abner Lei nh ‘doing penta the Gugboarg Of Panadlan luctessee say you ‘ot more go than wan: . ? Tr caUug! ghtofa well-kuown walle de! ‘ * ee ‘ us ecostyine thatyowaee without winciu, ‘ait directions, and, as tongues have begun Bo conoluded tho guard, turning away. tea Aethodlat parvon of thelr acquaintance, | ‘No. ‘There Is ny such title In Voudootsm, | thy weeplng for nor, and there wus w light, a | p fog before the roys of the morning aun, ' t Be. -S * 2 : . i