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IRFXI—SIXTEEN PAGES which required application of the depositor | riage for the young Indy, and was very -at- in era was walyed, tentive to see that none of her bundles wero Ablgalt'a article in the atlantic ts to get | lost, and that sho went to the right hotel. even With the inen, for she remards this as Seuncrs cane eaalty man, Shebe iewitlt OPPOSITS IN MATRIMONY, aquotation which pronotinees men“ person Theodore Parker wrote: Young people ally the negation a tliat they sen : 4 . Bene slight Importance that the higher ertuention of women should be per oro jd. be pervaded by a religions About three weeks no. in Naples 38,000 women operatives, finding the Royal Tobace co Manufactory closed for the purpose of ro~ pairing the damages wrought during the re- WOMAN. A LovesStory that Ends in a Somewhat Too Tragic great favorit with them, especially with stately Mra. Beresford, whose affection for too had heen tainty. hastrenentil tte bette. ing about oan eteageament between her daughter Clare and mysell, Clare wus five years ing: fusions a fate, aristocratle Hille lady of" twenty sui iners, Sho was extreinely devoted (ome, my love, and redoubled my unceasing efforts | ‘They (hronght the Ing toestablish ber Innocence, Hikate from the | thea with a dantern, and they Litenedt first lad refed te see me, Phd written {ps mut ib Ww ou ry Uitte fuploring her te speak, fH anty one word that | while i rer together and Might prove ber Innocents but she wrote, | kiss each other styly and: sateez and fini. Teansay tolilng., 1 pray only that you | diately the Hight would: blaze tp. The ght may be happy with Clare? And the terrible | was real frightened, and hisisted on the dark daya follawed swiftly upon the | young man’s sitting on his aide of the bigey, Manner. whila L was) proud to know that only afew | other, cach selding to the sibte web of evi- | and he was a little frightened the first feiv | self, from the imputation of credullty by elt- | general character, and such marringes are ore pullsturbanera formed in procession, short months witat intervene before the Hime | dence they were Wwenviny tirana my darting, | thes that the light fared tp: butas he eaine | Ing other more wonderful things that are be- | generally good ones. They do it instinctlve- it i 1 anners nt tholr huad, some bearing the , ——_. fixed for our murringe. relies 1 fancied It tnust be some } ottt to hug, he was galng to tug, 1 At tu nserlption * Long Live the Queen,” and Inthe confidential cliat with Clare and hee mother before Tinehcon wag served in the qualnt old dining-room, L was mady painful. Neved, Including, with charming impartiality: ne y “OS Dre Gulls’ Hom for. Gousumnptives, -whlel Ty, Ae Sane AN ANE ICE SAsy aly iiack he professes to support py prayer alone; the | °Yes red i blue, and my Woman's Faith Home for Pielirnites, whieh | overvehemence requires to ben Jittle modi. marched to the Palnce of the Prefect, Hera they were with difeulty prevented from on- terlng ina body, ‘The questor and a police ho Princess Stephanie and Hor ie dream from whieh T must surely tight inte day; so he went to lying to her ‘a Unusually Happy Mar- soon nwake, Yet there was Mrs. Berestord’s | about the horse being a phosphorous lorse, hitter walling for the disgrace pon her | Te sald there was sane horsesso full of phos- y mvare ofthe necessity foreoncenting my [house and Clare's terrible pallor and inate, | phorus that when they got warmed np a tlt | professes to cure by prayer alone; Christ's | fled with somewhat duliness and reserve.” | fotce restored some order, and a deputation rine Fe a ET eee eaeer i uuat | enrvoweul. despair gave me nn additional | ti from driving, hey sed tight all around, | miracle of taking money from aferan caumlit | Wien these opposits come together to bo | PL five werevlectert nut recelvell by the Ure. _ arrangement for Alton Woods au the wor. | pang Uhat 1 had brought double troubleupon | ‘Then they got nearer and tho electricity ite wed thes do not know ft, but exch thinks the fect, who promised to bring thelr complaints fish to pis the tax, and Ilfs saying: RIMM neath alsa" Bese mnrica <Unne Li other just ke himself. Old people never crowning justifieation, of her credulity is in {marry thelr opposita; thay marry thelr simi- this arraigninent of the Omnipotent for lol- | lars, and from calculation, Each of these vow, Mrs, Deresford was Joni in her een~ ture ofthe linprovidence of hor husband's prathertietaw, Arthur Grace, wtelt lac resulted nt his death in the ndvent of Ilarie before tho proper quarter, Meanwhile the banners lind been confisented by the police, and the excitement consequently greatly in- creased, A ery wis raisod of “Let 1s zo to hors again appeared, and for an hour they rode ‘There remained but one day now before | alang lu the ‘aventiur by.the bright Haht. ‘The that on which Iillarle was to appear tin | younm selentist passed a number of thes in felon’s dock, and on {he torning of that day | another buguy. aud he iy so well satistied An Eleotrioal Phenomenon Which» Disa- greonbly Surprised a Pair I ul s oe fess denendent | Clare eam to me with the old wistful ten | with the experiment that he will apply for ny ting things zo on sos ants Is ve the Queen at Capoulinonte,? but on the road. of ‘Lovers, iter, her Tue a8 ae ‘ gs ila ; : twornarrangements Is very proper, In thelr | thither at ihe Tinzzn Dit pan her uncle” Clare's lattrhtnye atte, derness of smanner. and pressing her cold | patent. ‘The young lady was very niich an- In regard to woneral proba a a | ‘ at the Plazzn Dante, the procession —— tlon that Hilurle repines her tn companion. | white check to mine, so that L contd not seo hoyert ‘nt tha queer light, and, while she ean: | avow That no ofiinalits: aaa nity, ecandaly Jond Journey thoxe oppesits will fall out by | was without further ceromony dispersed by ship to her mother after aur marriage, hu Na oven more ‘that, Mrs. Beresford’s ex- Ghaunntions ngiiigt the orphan; thors was Th aan Uttar want oF sympathy: in aniile and. % the way a great many tlines, and echarin the charity isso increditiens that the Omutpotent | other back i y und " se ain, and by und by they will bo Syste a tho world should [ct thinga yo ones agreed as to ‘tw place they ‘will go to, mut are. cs Abigail demolishes man and the news: | He, road they will ga by. “and hott the police. CURRENT portry. her face, she sald In aglaw, sad vole, Gere | not pity: that ahe did not enjoy the ride, sho ad, If Hitarle alles, whint will you doo” hua requested her escort to te careful next “Silarlo must not diel” L exclaimed pas | time when they go riding and not get n phos- slountely. Unheuding my words, Clare con- | plorous horse. The young man, when he How a Texas Girl Started a Funeral ani Punished Hor Faithless ay Hed, ‘Tho man wil be ae ‘ Sweetheart, volvo that contrasted oddly with the sweet | tinued: zot buck to the stable, told tho livery man | papers, and leaves Divine Providence under become _reconctled. ni be | yes, Jnok and I have quarrelled. yownd to pai ennotional face L was longing tu sue again, e Could you not love mengain, Gerald?” | tint wos tho Hxlitest Ha he ever drove, and | heavy Indictment, and, {f words were things, noler enh dared, for bed resented Forever, and his Mnewe tan Tay henry a <—.... Tews not tntil dinner that my wish was } Perhaps my sitence answered her, for with | he wanted a ealelum Naht the next time jig ) Would putt down the temple of all erention fi Hi. | vo avrorn to tear, and both nre to forget it 4 1 | self, and she will be a nobler womnn for hav all the rest, itis by its calm temper, Sutera Hor Heheleneles a supply her with whine mind, togidal sequence, and argumentative | BG pels, If the Wtvore alter anil leer th power, ‘The ivellest. part of Mr. Clapp's | EPs, ere ber real generaslt an ave tk paper is that whiel, mildly reintes Abigatl's | thelr hearts, ty ep svi Fhe Olt Belt newspaper eliamplonshiy oC Mra, Howe's | Bt? ny HOvInE 3 uiuch aberter, Journey, fe Seposle hut her own article fins added to | Makes Inust nssoclate Wingelf with one tke the itertainment, und It. wottld sue that Imself, A perfect and complete inarriaze Mr Clapp's. “Sympathetic. Banking ? hing | ky Perhaps. ns rare ns perfect personal beauty, elven her nn oceasion for another paper, iit Alea aainall traction, pte re yen Ww! : aside! ‘i if order to get even with men, Very few are Inarried totally, and they only. . eam er soine forty be ity years 0 ANTI-SLANG PHRASES, gradual approach and cxpertanatts seieh a ‘The Reforin Club Is the tlle of a new or- | inte and sweet fruit is complete mnrrinwe ganization by young Indies ‘for the purpose | that It needs a very long simmer to ripen tn, of discournging the use of “slang phrases” and then a Jong winter to mellow and seasan, a a , | Duta real happy marriage of love and Juda. in conversation, Atn recent meeting, while | ment between a noble tian and woran Ison a member was addressing the Society, she | of the things so very handsome that If the inattvertently made use of the expression | sun were, 28 the Greek pocts fabled, a gor, “awful nice,” and was galled to order by a | he inight stop the world to feast his eyes with gratificd, when, after p careless introduction from Mr Hanastard, Ullurte flashed one warm Jerateful ghtnce Into my faee, ant throughout dinner preserved 2 grave silence, ny few well-mennt endeavors at couversa- tlon with her only elletting low monosyllabic replles, and the cold surprise fn the faces of Clare and her mothor that T should address her warned me Cor [tlarie’s sake te appear fo maintain the sune Indifference toward her as distinguished thonigelves, indolent Clare retained her town habit of keeping her toon until the morning was far nvaneed, when she would deseend fn the most bizirre of morning follets, In thne for the lute breakfast with mun: eonsenent= ly during my, sojourn at Beech Wall 1 was free to pags the enrly morning hours In whit. aver way suited my faney, else 1 hod not dared to appolut. the meeting with Hiturie, for Clare was'a very exacting Htte bride elect Indeed, Ah, that delightful morning, in| Alton ‘That wo have over loved, or oven met. ‘We sald farowell forevor, That was—oh, Itecems a aA age!—three days neo, Tve not bohedt him since, nid your ean seo Von juat as infiserable as can be. And.tack is quite heartbroken; that { know; For when wo quarrol, nlway' Iw 80, Although ho won't neknowledya It. Yes. wo Have bad two othorquarrets. ‘This mikes throas Wout is the fuss about? Just naught nt all; We felt ke qunerelling, and that was nil And so wo wont to work and had a tiff, You say you think we're very foolish, if There Is. no cause for disnwreement, Ob, w ‘hat splondid fin itis you do not know! Parting heartbroken, ny’er to meot again, Js pretty hard to bear, Vilown, But then For that you have repayment, ten times o'ory ‘Tho ccatuay of muking up vneoe more. along, sobbing sizlt she stouped and kissed | took Is girl out. ‘They will know what quy habds bet, when T would have taken hers | eatised the light when they read this. | It ts inmine, she turned from me switlly and hare | getting 80 there ls electricity In everything. ried front the room, i L never Jooked upon her iying face again. LOVE AND REVENGT. Late that wight they brought her home, white | A earrespondent in Texas furnishes the and dripplig, from the Mere, newr Alton re q Woods, and With ler a letter ndriressed ty | following sad story: In one corner of the ne, LT apened. it with, sinking fiands, and pilacecorel sat a woman, young and benutl- thera finder at my sect tig Inlgstng frase ful, but. with a settled look of despair upon ot hes are certificate. Yer, hers; | her tue 1 1 for, when Jolned, that whieh wns thonght to like fae fui SE eee tani auinen forin parc of the letter G was In reallly park |e * ¥ wd of the tnithal Gin the name of Clare, “iil | aud about her was that Indeseribable atiios- arle Clare Beresford,!"—poor,, sinfal Chure, | phere whieh breathed of superior education whom we lind always called by her second | and refined, cultivated habits and tnstes, As hones null ye hut forgotten that she, too, | was easy to be seen she had a history. A gene Tu her letter she told how she had grown tleman who sat in another part of the ear, a tohateand fear the min who liad been the | Sheriff of n ‘Texas county, related brleily her hero of her thougiitless schooldnys, and had | story. As had been surmised, the lady had Jured, her into that fatal marriages how ber | been brought np under the best Influences Failuee of an Anti-Stang Socloty—Tho Princess of Wales—Lost Lingerlo, Etc., Elo. —— THE JESTUETE, For The Chlenao Tribune, flat, form serpentine, + Bemmguld voto, as from the moldy Gown of dliny myaterious green, Gore besprent with buys of gold; One huge flower of tawny hue . © Doth abo cherish in her handay 0 the utter, uttor, utter ‘Heauty of ber us sho stands! In the peacook-room, where nothing Hulf so rude ns sunshinedares ‘Jo approach this pallid maiden With Its loud, plebelan glares, ‘Angular contour, drooping oyelids, MEASURING THE RADY, ‘We measured our tiny baby Asahe lay in her cradle ted, Au a neigbbor tnurmured ominously, artlatio'lly uncombeds Toye for me and dread of him had conquered N i “Ero a yenr will the oblid be dead.” “ a as ee okeredaion aubtio, Woutlss the first of many sneh when Hilarie } all sonse of riehe and wrong, wntll his thrent that great wealth and hih social standing | gtster member for transgressing the ritles, sucha spectacle, 9 ‘Asif avery hopo had roamed, and L wandered; sketchbook in hand, ainong | of oxposire lind tinpelied her to eamnit, the | could command, | She had been blessed with | «tn what way have [transgressed 2” asked TWO CHILIAN LADIES ‘Then a pang of wo o'erwhelmed me, : the tall, stralglit pines, the shadows. of thelr | crime for whieh Afliary Graeme. stood ne- | every educutional ndvantagg having gradu | to speaker, blushing deeply Gon. Kilpatrick's sailing aa Great dread and boding thrill, Wan latyirnum In hor tresses; fitriitrine “brnvehes flecked withsaniber | cused, ‘She told how Htinrle lind met her | Aled Ab Vassar nud shentesone tine fn “it v . Zen. Kilpatrick’s sailing to lis restored P And f took the pearl-pink fi ? “You said it would be ‘awful nice’ to ad: post of duty deprives Washington of two “So warn, sonore and ri uaa mit youtig gentlemen to our deliberations,” | arch and sprightly tadles, whose innocent replied the other. | - pleasure at the victory of thelrcountry added Well, wouldn't It be 9” replied the spenk- | inuch to: the charm always felt in thelr 50- er. “You know you anid yourself no longer | ofety. But those who know all the facts in tenms of suniight, or thrended our way through fern aud bracken to‘some specially dninty bit of woodland seenery, where seated on nh fallen, tree-trink, or lnoss-erown bowlder, with waving grasses around her and velvet masses at her: feot. Ilarie Star-Ilke {impulses ond sad. + decay, divinely lovely! Othe conrsencas of things glad! Deep delleht of gloom seputcbral! Falr divinity of death? combig from the scene of ue murder, and | tWivel through European countries, Whiloin Knew her to be uuiitys how she had ngreed | the Netherlands her heart and the promise fo keep allent that Linlght be fyaceal alt pain | Of her hand were won by a handsome titled and stuune, and haw, finding Harie had won | seapegrice. ‘This was two years mo, When sinned for, she had deter. | ghe returned to this countr. her lover fol- st and oblivion In the dark | lowe after in the course of n few months. And T watched the baby’s breathing, The flush on each ronnded chouke ‘Tho beat of her bird-tke pulses the love Clare ti With u feur too wild to speak. mined to seek Discase and soring—precious beauty} Urneme seemed to my excited fancy the eme } waters of the Mere, Put imenuwhile the gir?s father had died, | nga than yesterday, that—" the case do not grudge the loss here wyjeh is ‘Almost coarse fs life and breath} Doutmont of sone Ealry tle 1 of the forest, Need 1 dwell on the Joy of that tine whieh | 8nd his vast forhine find Been swallowed up “Yeu, I know; but you sald ‘awful nice” | meant by their: return to their nativetand, ; Tay tbo rag atta vene, Pa ia fond knew but oursel followed, when Jlarie’s Imoeanes was pro- | 2) wild-ont speculations, so that the foreigner claimed and she wag free to auteaL tothe found his promlsed bride penniless, Like home she hind never Mought: to ave ugain, | Most of Mis kind, he broke olf the enpase- She: wept. bitterly for poor Clare, and | went and set wbout seeking 0 desirable al- devoted alt her tiuie to the bereaved parents, | Hanes elsewhere. Ho. found it In the person MN they Brow to clove her as. thelr | ofa youn Indy vii In the same ‘exis saving angel, and ng the wonths railed on Lang: te the sigh he lat come to marry. ite peace mud happlyess returned to Beach Hall, nnediately set out for Europe. The s of these daily” meetings. Thottzh no words had passed be- tween ngs to the need of secrecy, wo lind tacitly necepted it asa fact, and appar- ently our uintual [ndiference to each other when in the goclety of the Beresfords was as murked a4 ever. a Somethnes my consclence sinote me that in her sweet Innocence Mlaria submitted her- self so entirely to my guidanee, for 1 knew it wo were discovered hard things might be said of hor, but L was prepared to defend her with my lifete need ba, and halt and wood belng a0 isolated discovery was scarcely to be feared. ‘ Days had fongthened into weeks, until more thin a month had elapsed since my arrival at Becel Tull, and stil Clara urged The chatter of baby lnuzunge, That's slang.” ] 7 Chill is curlously far off and inaccessible Than nu Ragel's coug mute eect, “ Well,! ’ " Well,” said the speaker tartly, ‘If yot | from the United States, closa ns are the po- are going to beso awful nice about Mt, per- | litical and commercial ties tat ought to haps it Is; but £ wouldn't say anything if 1 | unite the two, and when the double blow fell were yo, Didn't you tetl Sallie Sprigeins | of the loss of Kilpatrick’s tnission and the , ‘ this morning to ‘ pull down hier basque 2” | fortune Of ie site Satu, It found the “No, I didw’t,” retorted the other, ler face tuutvocnily divided ‘ou enh ste ‘ot the growing crimson; “ and Sallis Spriggins will [ Jeagues of space which were in effect hnpas- say Laida’t. She won't go back on me.” se Miss Valdiviess is Indes In her ny Y ely! yy | StS! company, ie Jatiers le girl is { ct 2 is lee rent aie Fei bar) with her grandparents in Chili, where sha erlod the President, after rapping botit speak- | fas grown up without seelng her motlier’s ors to order. Let moask what Is the ob- | face. Death came in the meantime to add to Jeet of Uils soctety 2 ie the polgnancy of separation, ‘The sisters re- ole. discourage slang!” cried a dozen tres fos Junely ved sent a prortneen rlces, Now Jersey, where they were le! y the y Correct,” sald the President, “go on with | General's frequent lecture tours, not nierely ‘Then this mad Inofablo Slowly lifts’ her Lamin eyes, And her boneless form doth quivor ‘With the burden of her alghs. And the Lity-enter trembles “At her brooding soulfulncas, Touched and hallowed with the chrism Of Agtorious Joylesnoss. + Then sho looks supremely hungry In her swoet mtonalty, + And her medioval soul-strings Thelll with mournful ecstacy. | And abo louks with fathomless yearning, * Anda weird autumnal grief, Infinit sorrow and grand passion, ; Ona withored tullp-leat. ‘Through the rooms of our homo refichos And out through the enrdun way, And up to the door-side bounding Comes ny romping girl to-day. And agover and over often 1 wedsure ber on tho wall She says, in her balf-ripe aenteace, “ Sy maronia, Ise awfu' tall!" and that wasn, proud and bilssful day to me | ad When sweet Hilarie ‘Gruoma Deeame airs, | Teiveted girl found means, to follow then Gerald Forrester. slowly Dut surely. After montis — of ‘The previous morning Hilarie had blush- | pallent and persistent effort she ene tugly placed [nimy hand a serap of crumpled | Won them in a remote German town. ‘The paper on which was written in Hilarle’s deti- | st intimation the scoundrel nd of her cute cahgraphy afew Mes containing a pas- | Was the Sine, sudden crack of a pistol that slonmlenvownl of loveforacertain™ Gerald,” | 8cut a bull pitilesly through his false nul Which broweht vividly to my Wind the mo- | eraven hearl, Of course she was arrested, ment when L had. surprised Iftarle in the | Hid then followed weeks of trial and torture, growtuds of Beech Uni Finally sha was declared Insane, and the au- If CAME TO TER. “Whistle, bite lovingdauyhter,and you shan bnve a cow.’ Senevar whistled, mother, and nelthor cun dt puckers up my mouth so!” meto “stay a little longer,” and 1 againstiny: a the funeral vi 7 ie + an iy. 4 , au thorities placed her {na madhouse, Mean- ‘4 unprotected against dangers from without, | “Whistle, whistle, loving daught And her voleo grows faint and fainter, see eae biwatal eee won | yes “demi a an eS blushing | While a wenlthy relative moved “by a | 4, ,meuberrose te explains tnt she had: | but almost helpless alist their own serv- Reels Transat fovea cased tens au goal Drear as waves upon tho beach, Piiatio, my" beantiful love, iH it ina | roster Gran hetores. ; . mother’s tears, followed fer, and, fiiding bees met nt, fie ne jucet ng fe saying ants in their unfamiliarity with languages | “never whistled, mothor, and ‘cannot pow of Or the wind thro’ aad, snd piuc-troce— 5 tnt u mOh, darling, why did you not show it to | bet, secured her release, and now shy was ont awful nice ® herself but she hadn't the | and usages of the country, for, strange nx It ned come to that, Pknew now that THilarte was mors to me than Clare ever liad been or could be, and the knowledge that honor bound to the ene and dare not revent my secret. to the other was daily. hourly cours ; It puckors up my mouth so!" “ Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, ond you shalt have a sheep,” “LTnover whistled, mother, and ocither will I stamps to pay it now—would settle it, low- | may seem, Aineriean rad not Spanish Is at ever,.in the sweet by-and-by, tho present dayspoken in NewJersey. Jaw yc That'll be all right,” sald the Prosident; | thes kept up tave Hearts and siniling fuces pay when you have the ducats, all these years nntil the restoration of th Mate ahe wilanereds how could | asleep, and the officer was watehing that she Lot yon know T loved you 302” ld not do herself harm—almost a supertiues Incoherent grows ber speceh, . Then, with slovous undulations, t:- Doth the haggard inniten creep Toa couch, whereon she swooucth is valle - rend 01 ‘> Another itember asked if a young Ind: " ° z, Tua vai eathotio heap, turture fe Hs Heaven kao 3 filed tara ‘And goniehow her answer contented mie, | ples Mt eciltene Treen uElON eras yu chained gout say wold polenata fh Without subject Miplenintia past nul pay made reunlin pol ‘a yelTpukers up my mouth so!" ‘ oy uM e's Hi 21 owe Ken ROW Ing herself to a fine. 2 | ‘ is dau e, Fanny Daiscott | iunees of altection urew daily more distaste STRPIIANIE, the silken robes could be seen now and then solations of that faith which has a balm for “You bet she can’t,’ sald the President, | every wound. As they-will very likely who was tho orlginal founder of the society, | bo iit any’ has! eto return Tram hele weit and therefore appealed to when any nice | loved Chill there seems no dangerous indis- question was to be decided. cretion in revealing the little romance to add, “Then”? sald the speaker, “T smove that vi vi e Miranda Pew come down with the dust, for 1 fo moot wishes witch Aggauratofollow then, “Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, and you shall have aman.” “. ficrer whistled, mother, but I know very well 1, Aud tho whistling pretty soon began. fulto me, and I found myself constantly comparing her unfavorably with beautiful, Mah-souled Wilarle, 1 faneled, tov, that my betrothed had become conselons of sone change ii the warmth of manner toward hon iT metalile giitter of the handcuffs apon Vionna is dreaming of good Inck to tho | fier wrists and Iluke-of tho sinall but Seong Empire from the marriage of the savant | chati which held her helr Rudolph to Princess Steplaute. ‘The family of the Princess, snys a correspondent | GATIL ATASEIL TON, GIVES THE MEN MDARIE GRAEME. She was standing, when J iirst saw her, un- derone of the grand old trees skirting tho vgrounds of Beech Hall, the home of my falr erly e e e n ek ITS. el . . . faneée, Clare Beresford, to -vislt whom 1 for latterly she became sirangel pate and | of the Phitudetphin Zimes, has been tn luck a heard her say that her beau was ‘Just old —— BOUNDS FASITIATL anxlous-oyed, white n new elinglng tender. eo ge . 7 i ofe! Cineinnatt Garelte, splendid” . “Tov are’ happy commingling of duity and pleasure had | Hens tn fier deaneanor towards. ane seemed m | ry three generations, The first thar it betel, | opie ancient. spiuster, Miss Ablgall Dodge, | °™ SHE COULD NOT CLIMH. ee ren le eee a Welle My peat wag such 8, halr-pin as | eralking across miles of country rather In- ‘Shoot the chins,” sald the President, | creases the Navliity to mistakes. At least “will you never tumble?” one cannot know so well who ho {s talking: But the confusion was too great to be | with, alleyed. | Miranda,s blood was up; som , v sided with fier and others ugulnst. Ait amid ‘The, athar day ohms, Walinek nf fhe tho babol that followed could be heard such | Western Union Telegraph, retated n bit of exclamutions as “Dry up! “Ntee huekle- | ils experience, It occurred during one of berry you are!” & Wine off your chin!” | the night storms so frequent Inst stunmer. Hite ahall!” ete, when a motion to ad- | ‘Phe violence of the wind had detached the Prince Leopotd, was an atd-de-eainp imd genural factotium of tho Emperor Atexander when that potentate entered Parts in 1814, By an Ingenious intrighe of the Russian Covrt Princess Charlotte of Wales, who wis tu have married the Prince of Orange, rt Jured me from town this falr June morning. Clare find duly Informed me of the installa- tion of her orphan cousin Hilarie ass mem- ber of tha family and o dependent upon Mr, Beresford’s bounty, and lind also deseribad er Asan “uninteresting, odd-tempored girl ofl”. “Odd-tempered " she might be, I decided, noting tha haughty curve of the slender consel toiny faithlesness, Yet how could 1 wound sensitive Hilarie by sud- denly ending those mectings in Alton Woods, Clearly It wag my duty to return to town at onee, and on the afternoon of the day on which [arrived at this determination 1 went for n last stroll through the grounds, golug mechanically In the’ direction of Alton Woods, 5 . Leame suddenly upon Hilarie, who seemed somethues calllog herself “Gall Wamilton,” comes to the reseue of the female swindler Howe by openmg a back fire on tho mule persuasion In the Inst vittantic, Mer paper is entitled “The Gentlemen's Contribution to tho Ladies’ Deposit,” and Its purpose 18 to narrate how the men attacked the Ladies’ Deposit beenuse it was a-banking enterprise “ And I love yun, too,” she unawercd, As she bent her pretty heud, And the stars looked down from heaven: ‘On the ehurintns tOte-a-t0te, As tho pair of youthful lovers Gently swung upon the yate, * Yes, I love you,” she softly murmured, Looking tip ut bin ngnti. “Holy mackorel! Gee Moscst"" Answered hu in direst pain, made to fall in Joye with the lucky Sax Coburg—Princs Leopold. | ‘his anarriag put the family on three thrones, Belglum, of the fauelful Viennese that the younr, of her own sex, who had graduated through couplo will some day hold Vicorexut Court | the practices of clairvoyant physlelan, fort- In Constantinople,—the “unutlersble Turk” | une-teller, and a variety of petty swindling, Daviity passed Jn hits cheeks, mil Austria pos- | and through a couple of years ina lunatic se eng ti whteh aS eCo- asyhim, sot up auletly, Ina private house of burg luck filled, ‘Che unhappy Carlotta, | respectable appearance,'a Ladies’ Deposit, wife of Maxiuillan, was auititions, impa- | for the benefit of single women; to receive tient, restive, She rebelled against hier place | dopostis not to exceed $1,000 from any person, at tho Austrian Court, She could tolerate | and not fess than $200, to Nine 2 , to pay Interest ab the Hee ee te ee ee to aa ites rate of 88 per 100 a month, payable every three and the. Grand Dutchess of Tuscany. She | months in advance, Its benefit was tinted forved the weak and amfable Muxiiuilinn to | to single women, and tho Hmitation to these aceept the temptation Napoleon put in his | sums was beeause It was pecullnrly for the way, and becuine the mockery of an Em | yonetit of the genteel prior, to help thelr nar- pres, Sho is to-day and has beon for many . on % inv, a se Trtly A the enstle of the first | tow tneomes, ‘Thus $90 was to bu pald back Of he Coburg Kings of Belgiuin nt Lacken, | on every $100-ench year, quarterly, In ad- TOrhape the most interesting of the king-] vance, Andas the design was:to help the folk of Victoria and the new bride Stephanie | support of the gentee! poor, and not to en- is tho ing of Vartugal. who married Yan | cawrage specutitian, each depositor wns re- kee git], and refused the ‘crown of Spain be | quired to tke away her tnterest each quar- enuse the grandees stipulated that he must | tor, She might return with It, but aho must leave lis wife behind him. ‘This Is Dow | curry it away first, Fernando, It ds related that when Grant was ‘AS some night inquire how Mrs, Howe visiting Portugal the good-natured King | coukt pay back ‘$90 or every hundred exch sald? ** Won't you come and see my wife? | year, Pi es make goot the principal, sho She is a charming creature,—so lutelHizont, 80 | jnysteriotsly gave out that her “insticutlon” graceful, so Jind, and a, perfect ehitd i | was founded on a charity fund of $1,500,000 shnpllelty of“character, She iy very prout | raised by the Quakers, ‘Ihuse Quakers Ived of her domestic talents, and so, indeed, an | jn ncastic in Spain, Mrs. Howe did not ad- Mra, Gy who had observed that Ene | vertiva her institution stint f3, notin a man’s gilal tioblemen’ Jet other folks praise thelr | ways she had a far better, She solicited no wives, was much affected by Dom Fernane | gua.’ Her manner was tofty 28 of one who do's ontapoken . declaration of connubinl | pestows a benefaction. ‘To Tuquirles aie nn Diss. ‘The Ameriean Indy. told her friends | gwered: We huveour own way of conducting in Paris that Fernando aid ‘Theresa have o | our business; wedo not ask your patronage. luvely home, datight in imnsic and flowers, | Phe result was that the inquirer who came and Ive the life of a pair af turtle doves, with suspicion’ inind became a humble and Tn her now dominton Bieghanie 1s called | eager solicitor for the favor of being necept- the “Rose of Brabant”? She is the ouly | ed'ns depositor, But it way bo mentioned Princess In the Empire with pluk cheeks und | gine the female mind in general perceived no regular features, Great pains have beet | business reason why Mrs. Howe, upon her taken to strengthen a constitution dispused | financial gents, might not successfully run ently reading or examine 0 serap of | Portugal, and England; and now, by the | 4 woman. y Journ was carried by a large majority. trunk quadiuptes. wire, used for New York Pan hlant a necee koe tha white thront, tho stern, set expression of the Intently read! Sha? be ‘ortugal, al England, gud now, by ‘i ‘i 1 L rire, used for New York Ingenuity of fate, delleate coin and the eerie in weplting hele th her pont ule arin, an marriage of the grent-granddunghter, on the Fe eee ears ttre TIE PRINCESS OF, WALES. ea Near Uae vtelltes aio tet ernie us often ty tholarge dusky eyes of tho tall git under | proneh, crualln Thopanor tuthtesly in hur | throw of Austria, It Is among the dreumns Lnever realized {iI patd my present vistt | Mc. Mr. Wallnek enlled up tha overntor ne and, Half jealoug ] inquired: “ Have I surprised a seerct, Hilarie 2? “No” she answered, still confused, “They were inoroly soe lies I had writ n, “Hilarie a poctess!” I exclaimed, laugh- ng. the beeches, but “uninteresting”! Scarcely, my dear Clare, Ashaft of golden sunlight through the branches above Mlumined au untidy weallr of rippling brown hair, caressed slender, Ustless hands, from witelr had evidently Ulpped to her tiny feet the Iarge aun hut she wns too careless or too idle to weer, and the immature beauty of the proud: young face, the willowy grace of the slender figure in its dingy gray gown, destitute of bow or frill or any of the usual feminine adornments, fiter- ested me strangely. Stilt leaning aygninst the tree, she Inzily watched ny approach, apparently expecting ne fo pass onto the hall without bestowing more than a passing glancenpon herself; but, determined to speak with her, Lmade a short detour from the path, and, more mused than dlsconcerted by the expression of mingled turlosity and defiance which quickly over- Apread her fentures, I snk with the utmost gallantry at ny connnand: , “Pardon me, but ean yon inform me ifany Of the family are at the Mall to-day? Iam hot expected, and all seems wiusually still” “Nevertheless, Mr, and Mrs, Beresford and. Claro are all within, and, though not expect el, Mr, Forrester fs sure to be a weleome there, to London how large a space the park ocen- | there, and ordered that the brenk ho fixed, ples {n the, thoughts and affections of Lon- austin oe to-night; storm Is tou bud,” don sucloty, Itts far more of an institution | "Storm or no storm, the thing has to be than is tha Bolg de Boulogue to the gay | fixed.” Z, world of Paris, ‘The first questions thata | {Well l’vo got no Inder.” young Englishman asks of a young Indy pele one agd climb the pole”? This some- ‘when presented to her ata party are: “Have wt HT} ‘climb the pole." you been to the park to-day? Were yount|. “Whut’s the reason you ean’t?” Man- the park yesterday? [as not the weathor | ager’s temper going fast, - been delightful for the park Sately 2 ote | SUMMEIt SMILES. A professional beauty, though two words, 1s renlly only one silly belle, A Connecticut woman was appointed Coir atuble the other day, and the first thing she said was: “Now [ shall catch atuan.” Would'st bear the pun that Here wade, Embracing un the sand her Wet lover? “Sweet Tuslips!”” Lo said; And she cried: “O Leander!” Mary Walker asserts that tie Venus de dfed- Jel never wore corsets. Of course not, Sho didn’t wear anything; her wardrobe was tore-so, Grace—" 1 am going to sea Clara to-dny, Mave you any message?” Charlotte—“T wonder how yuu can visit that dreadfus girl. Give her wy love.” We have just read a handkerchief flirtation code, and nivise all men desiring to avold breach-of-promise sults to wipe their mduths with thelr cont-talls, 4 Sam Kearney, of Minols, killed bls wifo because he could not make her sit down In a chair, Ho-didwt begin right. If he had dui her to stand up sho would have sat own, Last summor she was eating green corn by gnawlog it from a cob, when her teeth be came ehtangled with acorn Bik. * Oh, deur,’ sald sho hnpadiently, Lo wish when they get the corn made they would pull ot tue'busting threads 1?" If a young an in a street-c@& plves up his seat ton pretty young Inuy he will be accused. of partiality; if he gives it up to an ugly ola lady it will be sult he does it for effect. ‘The average mean plan for hin tondopt is to keep * Soriblimus indoct! Soctlaua poomata prs- sim,’ she answered playfully, and tne incl. dent faded: from my mind to be when and how reenlled Lilttethen fmugined, Hllurle reeelved the naws of my approaching de- purture ino strangely silent mood which plauad me not o littl, especially when 1 found she was absent from the dinner-tablo on this, the Inst night of my stay. Clare, too, was away, When 2 hind communicated to ler hy resolye to. eave by the 13:50 tral on the morrow she lind kissed ine as thou ale were Josing me forever, and her white wan face and pitiful blue eyes touched me so deeply that Lind taken her dn my ari and kissed away her tears, ‘promising to return Jong before the day fixed for our weddings “Oh, Gerald” aha sobbed, “L contd not glve {ou up, dear, now," and again 1 won- dered could she have guessed ay xecrot. StH pale and, trembling with agitation she Tu Fene toher.rooms nnd nt dinner her ninid {nformed us that Miss Claro jit given orders not to ba disturbed, and Vlarle, be- ing inquired for, was found to have gongout some hours previonsly and nob yeb returned. Btill, conversation was lively at the dinner- tuble, when we wore suddenly started by a hurried tramping of fevt and a contusion of yolces, braken suddenly by tho unceramoni- ous entrance of Mark ‘Thomson, under-gar- dener at the Hall, who, breatiiless with ux- eltament, Informed us that * there was sine mut wrong. up at Allon Woods; a onan inurdered,. sur, ond Miss. flilarie she be wi? iim and sunt mo on for hoip." 1 was already atthe door, ny ono thought of a a vomit.” é Mr. Wallack lind forgotten, in the pres And truly. the magnifleent panorama of | paginess: tint Lewlavilte hind Hiv A preseor. equipages ar! promenaders that is unfolded | ator, but when reminded of {t he hired two there on every fine and fnshlounble day | boys to attend to it. affords a spectacle unparalleled in any other city In tho World, ‘The “tour du ine” Gf the FEMININE NOTES, Bols {s.tame, and meretriclous, and vulgar Mary Steadman Allis writes to the London compared to iL ‘The magnificence of the | News thut as women arc.able to pay the usual horses, the richness of the liveries, and tho | fogs for a callege education, and as thelr fees wlemunts and perfect good taste of the ve | 4 i oes tee hicies incre than. compensate for any | Would be as yalunbie to 4 college as those of Bhortcoming In the way of — toilletty | men, there seems to be no reasonable ground auangst. the Indies, though it must be | for refusing them the collegiate advantages confessed that such shortcomings are by | which are open to men, no means rare. ‘The Prineess of Wales < shares very fully In this 1 ‘ail passion | ‘Tho Lonton Society for the Protection of for the park, She drives there continually, | Women and Children owes {ts origin. accord- evidently taking a very womanly anid mnt- | ing to its President, ta tho increase of ag- ural dol et in her own great popularity, footy aa upon women and children, nd in the adiniration and attention whic! 1 ier wee 13. Aue, ‘oO excite, ek net ‘The society aluigat the prevention and pun- driving there with herthree young daugh- | ishment of auch’ crimes, Now that publle tora Inna large open barouch the other day, ( prosecutors ara being appointed, It might ba # mounted polleeman rode before her car- | though that the necessity for such a society riage to clear the way. ‘The Princess was " » Si dimly and churmingly dressed in, costume ‘ag this would cease, So faras hisuxperlence of palo gray chshmers, set off with nstight | goes there certalnty still exists a necessity cmibroldery in red beads, Her pretty close- | for such a society, nor can he see when that fitting eapata bonnet was In white luce and | necessity will coase, satin, ‘The three young Princesses wore . Ree. tae dnrkcalte foulard with palka |, Persistent obstruction haying been offered dots of White, and traw hiatstrimmed with | fF Many yeurs to tho Intraduction Into the "You haye guessed sny name,” I replied, tolling. What if L return the compliment toMlss Iiturly Graume? You sco I havo beard Uf you 100." x “Or course you wold henr of the Bores- fonds’ bete nofr,” she siuld—oh, so bitterly, Nay)" 1 protested, “no such epithet has AMlario, Mr. Meresfard and the men-scrvauls y i white ribbon, The Princess of Wales is | Dritlsh Parllument of a bill logalizing mar- seit ‘if, and bing but the been asatgned y ne | following, when Clare, white and shivering, | 12, ve Iyimphutic, and to wake Wer at | a bank which annually pald back $i on SO aie ‘tity et ¥ ¢ the sent Uilmself, and geo nothing bu ne.” med you, Miss Gravme, believe met md ay though sho would go with ines accomplished and learned Princess, Shoe } gyery $100 quarterly.dn advance, © ooking vary lovelye her delicate and fragile | riuge with a dead wife's sister, In regurd to | paper he ls reading, has 1 natural” capnelty for languages | Stra, Howe's Infloxtble rula was to recelve and music, and rides well cnouzh fo sntlsty | no one without b istter uf Introduction from her [mperial mothorin-law, Pluk cheeks | 9 previous depositor, And: when accepted, and waly way of glancing Hnpart to her t) she requested that she would not gosslp rustic alr, It s rare in the Saxe-Coburs | about thea Ladies’ Deposit; but if sho had a family to find pluk-cheeked girls, Princess | particular female friend, entirely worthy, 2 passage of the far bet- | wage) “ ntchamisatten do. She which Mr. Bright has written that tie ense isatill the Queen-illy of England, and ‘mneh | 1 one of very great hardship ans scandal of her grent ponularity Is due to her exquistt | to onr legislative system,” a niemorial on the and womanly loveliness, of which the British | subject has been presented to Mr. Gladstone, natlon are a8 proud as though she were one | asking his assistance In bringing the question of their own race, before the House of Commons. This memos sho looked so turribly ill that 1 begged her to return to hor room, bubtsho shook her head, saying, 1 mush go. Wilarie must not be thére alone,” and so Claro and I were the first to reneh the entrance'of the wool, the firatto sue Marie with hor face buried in her hands, + Just one? murmured he, involuntarily dirawhing closer to the luscious lips thatsiilled upon hin with such bewltchingness, while his own quivered in an agony of expectant anelpation, "So 1 notice,” reptled shoe coolly, ghiicing at the clovk, “and thu for "Notexnctly that, perhaps, but sufliclont et you know that J at lenat am not wel- tome here,” + Fora moment Clare's expressions, “unin- resting” aud “ odd-tempered,’” fitted be- tor thin more rol Steplianiy has that beauté de dinble which 18 | she might Inform her in contidence of Wie e ‘ nd shut the fore me, but when L would have spoken J11- | Kvodilus beside tho murdered wan saosin Pony eltgetive in eombinntion with white Ines iit of the dnntlty case cane ral Is signed by 23 members of Pariinment, | Jou MTN WB yeur coueeatlar and slut arte stupped mo Sie 5 panianad | ata bitterly. Chie turned studdering nway 5 but aw orunee blossonia, Rudolph thought, no hunelic Of tho fuitngon, At uae pandle LOST LINGERIE. Conservative and Liberal representing onus | Stteet«loor from tho outside, 1 aun forward, erying, “Hilarle} il- lu rO-the agony of tho white streaining faco, “ What fs the difference," suld sto, “ Hotwoen the moon and yout" “ Teannot tell, my treasurod ony," A well-known young society beau of | hulf of thoentireelectural body of the ited OL dist ‘ings uf gilaln, saying: Lovisyille, while traveling on un Indiana | Ktugdom, doubt, whou he wets hor wt Saltabury that it nature, It tay east ebe tnagined that this are ye Y . treo Pate Your Words, Mr. Forrester: sour would be held by the thousands who wit] contidentiat telling fram mout to mouth el {there a siflielent excuse ead much faster than new Tarity ’, Miss Annie I: B ti t * S lly Ine enough, Oh, why, wih: lifted to my ewn, ns she tottored to her feet, | POs da hor arrival ‘ cusd | gprea much faster than newspaper wdver | rallroad. recently, let his gallantry get the | | Aliss Anno Han pton Browsterwrites from Bald ho with ut'rest new, Spmehere?” And, to’ my Hatanisiinent and | etying aut: wildly, "0. why did yon come for Klasing Her aiteey one penuh, Te tt sing oF public outery. OF course the Iuetl- | hotter port of Tis jurigmont, and got himsutt | Romo that when tho famous balletalnucer, | Thy diturenon ty they et she stay, she burst inte a passionate luvective | herey? and with 's low, sobbing ery, sho pi 1 tution was rather slow In startlng; fora year | into a nice lttlu scrape, When he entered Mile. Zueeht, had her benefit In that city, a ith the satire of a Juul, Rense tho misery of her Hopundune position | reotait aud fell lnsensibly Into my arms, “21 cy Homan Prince sent her a superb honguet, tn turned thet areutings, wid the brideclect | jung fire, and meanwhile weit Llirduat e coldness and unkinduess of her rela- 7 “Tho moon huth gilyery quilttors, Jove, suomed vory much plonsert: Very fow heirs | some chavres of name and conditions, ¢ 4 the car at New Albany he found it nearly | the centre of which was a blank check, While you ary impocunious. aria, spenk to me—al, ‘tinrie, my love, my ‘Uves, Dreuwin aD od pr . to thrones Have such luck tn wives and very | yeluping thus by experiences but during’ 1860 | full, and he Instantly made for aseat nearly | slaned by, hls own princely name, A Madumhe asked her husband for a new out. Of Biter tenn LOWE Be Inst inte paroxysm darting ia SE acta ae ae carton ofhelrs lave such luck In lus | it got falriy oli, oud thon His benciltsepread | fn the middie of the ear, which was vacant, | Parisian Nghto'-toos would hayo ruined the } ft. , My darling,” bw replied, © that would Hie Hapartee dor the Boston -Heratd tn ss? reporter for he ston - Herat BUGGY ELECTRICITY, female uttire, interviewed the Ladies’ 'De- Since the olcetrie lzht has proved a suc- posit in 1879, anil wrote 1 up; but this sews cess for lighting largo buildings, it has oce fo haye made no Impression on the public curred to 4 scientific man of St. Louts that | wiltid, aud uelther tha Lerald nor iuny other electricity coult bo used on wheeled vehicles, of thee vl ila seu esaa f the pula took He knew by experlenee that thora was al- | fad about 1.500 depositors to whom she owed ways more or less electricity wasted,—for In- | about 000, She hid baught and ttted stance, when a young couple were out riding, | Up & Jarger house for $20,000; she vivitedt q “de 1 waterlug-plices; was reptted a public bone —s0 ho experimented.” Those who wore ont} Potross and lived In-eluver. At that time on the Whitefish Bay rond last Sunday even- | the sldvertiser took “the mniter up, pro- {ng way have been astonished at the unusual | ponnetng ita awhile, ‘continued the attuek light that shone the whole Jee of the from day to days au dala lvteed up hi abr n i | + and | onttors, As Mrs 01 r He a egal tia i back nelthor Interest nor principal save by a tient ‘ing of . ocuupauta of tho carriage, ‘The sclentlat had | {torg, Ahn cg, crus, OF a ave Jearned th carta sour Hiv i en susuousloly after It it aid out about $10 ek a livery stable for theeven- , Alrs Howo sald: tno suspension wits fig i he'belbed he diver man to allow | temporaryybut the Quaker fund did not tan win to exnstinent on it o bug i ae Mo, and Jhera, wn no resumption. Mra, un sclentlst put a small electrig:lamp o! r vel ite Wiwer pare of the dashboard, out of | ed; she was convictod, but had applied for a ith n man’s utter abomination thereof, I ality best ta catm the tempest I lind tie eve Le and ys finspeakably re heats ad sul, brokenly: io ssa Mua; you must ink vel a otime, ‘Mire Forrestar, but I wil ‘go. away, ¥ yas never Yery good, but now Tam growing te fad, pads aud fu go, wretoli that in Til noe stag cin f hateful, wicked girl, wis pity arose within me for this lone- -yeuled in thoag few passionate words to Clare, » Even then Twas. conselous of, the pititn, dumb desvair on the poor pale face. as sho abruvtly turned aud leftme alone with my unconacions burden, . pray Ivayen 1 may never know again the terrible axony that followed close upon that fatal night. << wonder £ did not go mad when they accused Lillarly, ny beautifnl fillers, w the foul erie of murder. I had oon mercitully spared tho sight of her ar- reat, Dut they told me-she had uttered no word, only white and stl hact lat them lead her away to 4 folon's cell, ~ ‘the murdered man liad boon atnbbod to the heart with sume weapon which had not yet been discovered, and hidden ty his clenched right: hand: was found partot a torn certificate of warrluge solenmized two years before botweon Gearge Morton Daan? and" Hilarie ——) ‘Phe rest lind been torn away, ga that only that Christan nanio ro mahned with what appeared to be the Upper part of ncapitul .G, the inttiut lectur of tho aurnome Gracie, In the opinion of the police this was sul- ‘Tho seat in front of hin was occupied by a | contding venerable adiulrer, Zucelii, how: Jandy and n little girl, while just beltind sata ao $6 oy Tallon, au, prnent, Shin le young lady, Who seamed to be alone, ‘Tho | and drew her mopoy without dispute. Etat Indy and Nttle girl got off at a smut! station | she written 100,000 francs Inston, the fanily about hale way to Indiunapolis, Just as the { of her amet adinirer would probably have train was starting from the station the young prosecuted her, which can be tone in Rome, man noticed & bundle of female clothing | Conductor Milos’ train on the Olio & Min lying .on vio seat at bis side. ‘Nhe alsslypl Railroad, suys the Cliginnatl ne Hew’ suatantly ‘ocourred to “iim that] gudrer, “Brough? to, this efly. for anedical to Indy who hud just gotten out had treatment A. J, Van Buskirk, of Scottsburg, forgotten the bundle, Me thrust | his Scott County, Ind, Mr. Van Uuskirk wis houtl out of the window and callod to her, | Ween to thy sation ait Boottebure au but she was just entering the atation and did ee ee Gpandeaaine’ net De anaes cb not hear hin. ‘Pho, traty had now started, | CAG ute eters oh Agen ni ae and the young man thought that the bundle proposition of marriage wa ninde, ace would bo lost If he did not act quickly, so he the license obtatned, and, Just as the train pleked it tp Hie TOW iLout of the whidow | Hove in sight, the Mev, aA, Z, Wade appears 6 i yas requested ta quurry Chen and, while Poca See alton eine the camductor Kindly held up tha. trate, the awit that ho had acted with wonderful pres ceromony wis pronounced, nud the tatvatle maceot minds {Ryings WeNt Alone. sMOALLY Becnnu nated by r wite ng Hes Was cartiet Unt within ‘few aiilos of Indianapolis, | Ob the train, aud tho duyatlon af, . few hours to the almost dying tusbind was when the young lady on He deat halle {unt one of de pleasing features of tha long, hot, —— wake the third In two months, and tines are so hard thac—" You wilt kill ine?” axe elated tho lady, bursting tito tears, "and ses WI cost you more than : Aly but J should have to was the comfortlug re- bury Joiner, : When you seo a young man sitting beside amuch “banged” or frlzzled young lady In. nrilrowl car, ora theatre, and hts arn sect of lustinetively crawls around the, tap of her seat in close proximity tu her dollar-store necklace and baek holy, you muy feel assured that hu Ia not her brother, And tho chances are las, than one in a hundted that they aro married, it ls now that tho Boston maiden writes home from Naltant or the White Mountain: “Lahall return home on the halGpast 4 o’clock train to-morrow to resume my studies, Get down muy. Emerson, and dust olf my Thucydides, Please seo If you ean tind a cheap copy of the Rig Veda anywhere, and Sua that you have o large plate of beans ready for me oe my arrival,” ' gi-spirfted creature, Ilitle more than ite i yerrs,und, taking one of tho nervous int pas ih mine, Lreagoned with, her course Gus earnestly upon’ the folly of the and ee the Would pursue, pointing out ways Teast ans for, making hur present lite at inne tore endurable; and, inquiring deeper she ter nannor of occupylny the long hours the Peve alone, J tound, as 1 auspucted, ramp Passed them chletiy in desultory Delghts (Wout the hall feounds and the dark as country, all the while brooding while tho had on Hneongental surroundings, Daraulty whted utter Uegiected tastes ar Ars, ate, x rab OCCUDY' dusty ride to tho city.” 7 t light of thé driver, mud ran einai! copper | new trlal on law yates Tooke under the seat sho was occupying, on and a ‘The young woman who desires to havo dotltude, lndingtan eye tent a oharns to alent to pte an cee thal yo Aires tu the bick of. tho went,. tt fs well | Abluuil, Dodgo way 0 depositor, and when. thy sunt behind. her, and thon on the seat on | ‘Tho Marquis of Snilsbury, at n recontpub- pie od iy the re ng" fi pate love MRR eT aan ee vouth alte had been Jed Into a | known to tho student of mute that when | the “ddvertlaor attaekad the Lantos" Deposit } Mi ioudon, auld that it seamed to tora? publ i te Latided ished? ti ¥ love of art, ; a 1. for which £ ant myself an fag te J arranged a meetig next more tnlat larle and myself in Alton Woods, ailure forest adjoining the grounda at the de, Where 1 engaged to Mnitlate her Dever foreny Qt, ctuyon sketching, 7 L whull deapant rget the quick change from sombre fy deney to radlunt hope and pleasure fac {pftnstormed the pute, tearstalned So one of rare britany and lovell- ity Tages does happiness Involve of inten wien We parted J could searcely 10F8 tho Hens, Wlushing, silting malden Hour gyi? O pate, sad gleLof a short half 38 sin; Tuly, a chitd’s April nature had tt ye Uitarde Graunte, * Tae AueNE meatlug’ with Clare was of wl grveted aig wich tale oa and her pare nh thale weal ware exe 4s Of Welcome, “Thad always been o which tho young man was altting, | No meotinus Thla search ahd not seem to wullare Kins that die great dilculty is to til argas hor, and 1 a fow moments she, began to | ments against tie pxtension of highar edu- make Inquiries of him,-lf he had seen n | cation to women rather than to dnd. argue small buudle an ony onvof the setts, ‘Tho | ments In favor of it If such education young mun’s bie began meadually. to staud | were valuable to thosy who had to make adn end, aud for a few: mononts ho was | their way in thy workd and to win thelr spaochlesn ay he bogait to reuliza what hind | bread, th was as valuabla fo women as to Decomo of the bundle, Me di} not dare to | mens If It gave robustnads to the character, toll her what io hai done, go he replied that | and wwinent to the Intellect, suroly tread ho had seen nothing of it, ‘Phils increased | quatities wore us admirable in the fomile sex the young Indy’s uncaalilews, and she made | as iit tho male, ‘Thosa who were interested Tnquirles of Me conduolor, ‘but he had not | in the promotion of religious education mung seontt. A indy in a seat just behind her | be de ply sensible that in every genvration finally asked Je [6 was. “very valuable | thy religious convictions of wanien were the bundle. No,” replied the young lady in | mainstay of the Christin rellicion, meause an audibta - whisper, © but I 'e ntnined my | i was thoy who produced tho enrilest inte only nightgown.” > Tho youlug man ule picaatons ote the mipuls of those who would tempter to make some uniends, when they the men and women of the next Kellerd- reached tha city, by agrecing go hire a car | ton; and therefore iy was a matter of uo nesallianca With tho murdered man, Whose Fine ce Was, Haaitedly plebolan, and his cowtng to Beech Hull-to ‘claim hls wito had aroused hier dormant passion, and thay in her dread of exposure she hud lrst tried to 0 tuln possession of the proof of hur marrlago, and stulned her soul with murder, Tn the dastur’s opinion tho crime liad been committed during tue afternoon of the day tupon which tho Dody was ‘discovered, Like flash of fre there came to me the remen- Dranee of that meeting with Ilarle and her hasty concealaiont of tho xerap uf paper romombered hor guilty tush, her confused roplles, and, Ugaven forgive se, for one brief moment I'trembled lest sha should ba uilty of the horrlble orlme fiuputed fu hor, L drove the mad thought from mo as unworthy my wanhov ‘vnnt Yor man und ae blonde | ste aalled In ta detond lt, followlus the wll Peek att ae the -pusitive and the | tary maxiny that tho best’ dofonsive [s,the of- Heaative, that 14, he fs positive ho will put | tensive, ond areola ting tho men In general, iis arm aronnd her, ant she negatives ths | and wn's owspapar tar thelr wuany at arrangement along nt first; until after dark | funses, and in pagticular for wufrlend fives thure ly cortuln glectrip cirrentestabllshed, | to this bang ehturprise of a woman, which small in Hself, but of great power If properly sho charged to: dam's dente ry of womndi's husbanded, You have nll ett $, Oh, don’t | superlor nancial yuillty, Ih short, she blush. {tis like your aruy gotthia asleep, or | brought to this Chivairuus defense that acute biting your fumiy-bons on tha writ oi HN logle and tat freedom of fmputation which snekiig-chatt, Wai this wire was placed | ste exercised tn tho Now York driune for 50 thut the arn of the young peopls would:] stulwartlsnt agulngt Mr, Mayes’ Admlilstra- touch It, “Just nse they wore prssiug. Fitz- | von, Fly # : gorul’s, ders by the toll-yate, Hey buzan to | Abigail Dodgd was 4 depositor, but not for snug up, and before they gob to Lendeman's | her awn aocounty it woe fora very worthy the Hittls lamp began to throw out light. $6] female Erlend: ghat she Intorevded with tho went nee a horse's tat and Ht up hy Paddles! Dengalt Porlaua lt ene 8 spell rout for seyeral rods, a ee YOUN PEot CONCESSIO i were alniost aa aatonfahed as tho horse was, Baullton thut dis rule of the Insttudion ‘ please puck up her clothes inn dirty towel, crawl out of the back Upstairs widow some dark raluy wight, and elope with the wan who currles and feeds ber dad’s horses, Li's ry bie prles to, pay for complinents, ‘one lt will brig the (it ws certalnusa dirty rahi- water barrel will beget mosquitoes Ju July. At anéyont. ety’ lady was called upon for n song, rn eee uf strike again my tuneful lyre.” Jler jiisband was observed (0 dodge suddenty and start hurriedly frau the roomn, remurkiig: Not if L know it, sho won't, She belts blue blazes ont of mo at home, and 1 stand It ike n man, but when :ehe threatens to hit ine tia strange louse, and calls ne u Har before a whole crowd, i pus long as Lbave @ spark of manhood