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' ROBIN'S-EGG tm dame haughty t> tow the Children, the mother, shud- rot, and ma foi, )o1 would all do badly, KISS THE DARK. ati ling in tLe perplexing meskes of the un —- —— cae wae uh detect continuance of ao tering sratow it hastily to her own arm; ar creatu es, when dis, : A iad vl ARK. svelied arn. Te egmes wt bre board Fair, in the bomely raimont hood with unwearied sweetness; indeed, sheex- | if she Spoke @ the adult sick, the wan cyen Baye th> honor of are pa rm her hurry Mire. Moore to take the | ‘wit was as the wins That « of her low estate, pr seed herself gratified that so much trouble | would look at her with a strange horror, and m ver doubt it, and Jian,” h= . candie with her, ae she n shay Breaned hum to , Stands Hertha Spon the dirvshold San taken off her hands, and that Adve #0 | tbe e would mutter words ina patois | may talk as they like, those who] aay Ey br | ibemly ainl geutly dedine bak pte 3 a oe Breceinquets UT? AS. Mane aaue iiteegt aca 7 twnoknews | fecoe eiraabed cannon,» tails moc | 51. § | The porpso¢ seal was on tinct 5 wiactd, Ine f :”* 2 is . aver eerereeteenen, chore on ber teen eel, in, ee ‘athome. If she wanted to betier than 1? If we don't te her down tke ae Eee eae ming | she put Ree hand om the handle of the outer ababeecons beat hugh “ To-day [shall fashion a bonnet asicep, and where she was enjoying the kindness to the child,Adele thisy she will come out O% her grave and i door, # ning if, she suddenly found her- And the Of the coming manhoot For the veriest queen of girls!” tion from her late ears of priv saa and aut ed her. Once she i Puce lapscod bis ne cs reddgmeck self in aos ¢: ee at & pair of stout ~ Shone ter his sparkting eye ht be expect: h ef arms, saying as _SBilente there,” sai * gard 7 arms. face brongt inco cio ¢ . ere is the dainticst fabrie physical beauty that made her freshness aud | “ pacolaque’ beiore my xem the ttle escort. “To m with the ef coun arent teed = th Le — before sive cond His Hosters sald with a siren ere iol pce yen a b poet See ae cupes | it > aes elne mart Tad nblie ty. b . 3 i fy yamacks given with a ig That matches just to a thought; fea aise, doctor at D@tefactors !" "ia Martin “Bo the | F Ae ~ LSet Pope pica 5 wk i hog A the un- at pe spa anne a easton nated \ “lied Sete @ Hive and lied, asa for | SOME most of all im the presence Ot the | Stan” wae tal me @id score; for it sald ay And I thonght what a glorions Right to «or th the fingers” hot a VS eo ond egt at Teulon, taining (othe last that ne | 1 RO ONDE man in all Wither! Tay ye done: “There. |. A manwith @ purpose bigh, . ist grew e for you madame?, Not faster umless did the world service, by ridding it of a | CO”! paren SS 5 hea iked with | tale that ‘s fell upon her unof Ard the moral c to say “No. you kill me first,” monster. But » and also Lesouef, doubted | more confidenes. among hi ona 8 ged ge cart | fem lips! ‘Tho’ a scoffng world be nigh. "works Hertha otteedy will,” Tama but Adele treated it as something out | ing only that toe Gace Che very rads ws stare anual gine rigneequamers of the act of helr> | ofa taco coming, his. wart atcetsd ties | , Ch : Saint Sashes 1 drink mo wine,” aaid the noble youth ‘orks Bertha of ready will, land; bu ated it as something out of \t tor tas very rude to stare oo summer's night in the sand; f . *t > . ‘ tm. Fashioning crown snd border, normal experience, aud, breaking through her | sofixedly at her, amd that Adele was horribly though they always maintained they should not | ('@Tly.) Ou such occasions he never knew | Pol. nad by this time diverted herself ot ear pen lemme Mie feartam oF, And sori thew Pa eae habits of reticence, spoke to every one quite | cross; how wntike an English housekeeper, have boge muses because of their m | aways to feel like screwing himself into the the i hi T'l take a st otene oe ' And while che thread fiercely of the strange sickness that had fallen | Monsieur Cabanel, when he was told of the tives, y: ¥ ‘grew in time to disbelieve vid | DOM Cove hole unl thetlanger that ist, | spouse angel? ie a onort ofc e rai Suttly ber spirit Iapece gmehicurrot and the Maison Cabanel; and how | litle scene, called Fanny to him, and said in a Martin Briolic and tis wisdom, and to wish that | NEATES Aoecomaes condition, thus to indulge ins ge Sees Snare ‘Away in a happy dream: poder enlarged more than com- Tees on eon et eee eae aed to herret- they had-tet-the taw sake a “*Hhis state of things being considered. no one — mmatratiome I rect nlethe “TGcr iuicret | Ot OF petine har eeeeete Leek ee ¥ 0 le as to her little nephew, she could Z Naw) won! not hurt little wife? by them. reserving their stremgth for ME | ever understood how he contrived to m ‘ J A hich td be sj Al A dream of a gnarled old orchard, neither give a name nor find a remedy for the pec ( and kindness, not wrong, that thou the hamlet's flonr and mending the asalegs pees re to enlighten Annie —— A ad here? Heres a mon | cvanraane — taege eouhas aes e 4 = the tar-off Springs, disease that had attacked him. There were wouldst de oan. abots, and leading & good life, according to t e the subject o Ils preference for her: or ny eh ES Pe ee A) pene Xe x strange things among them, she nsed to and Wr: What wrong could I do?” an- teachings of leur fe Cure and the exhor. But the intrude: y § pore: Mefome robles Wit ree ee | Bicutrot ad ‘acres done’ wet tince the old | swertd Pammy-vopean bite eyes wide. tations of theit wives.-.tl! (he Year Roun, matter proably remalus te Chisday Se wiuch 4 | 11. Sees ap BA 3 aes Sem letienent | Sol ace tobe ences Oe at jome i “ * r i : > stery ‘the yor | bi a 5 ec full of birds’ own treasnres, times were changed. Jeannette used to notice | “What but love should L give to my best and oo Miss Annie, however, had a tnir sh: pun m Hing and pon ate Cone tn Ge cis tn enter te preeeel Ee That ace now green. now blue, with anche a doetheiook bel tet hace cae tae | Oe Boye thy friend then, to thy mind? ‘The Landindy’» Complaint. and womanly cleverness stewed ~ po powmen plat ponchos gh tagger sae and to.quard against Gee danger of confounding ‘That hint of thelr leafy covering, rear ie y done tne i | Thon to ears asienr C. rey ° when sue turned from her fresh jexion and est me, dear’? said Monsienr Caban: ‘There's nobody knows what a woman that has ; Somewhere in the recesses of her pret fury. the imsensibility produced by apoplexy and choked with smothered langh- kindred diseases with that of drunkennes ot her trepidation, mow came to the | “Wearryve or re cneen” may berather dar hesd, althongh it was carried farntity mpon the i and rounded shonklcts of fresh Annie, Joe nS ee He grand plyysique to the pale face of the stunted. | Dear} Jules, who isso dear? who so near?” {8 charge of « family goes through, but Govt : chita. er, inp goes _ i . ° gai i " Almighty that made her. I've knowed what it air nat mies ine stistening fabric meagre, was a look, sh: fogs ag ae Matag — while he said fervently: was fo have women boarders that fiud fault— . rer ; there's some of "em would quarrel with me and | She did not need to be geuitnied that David | TS) oi x = serous even ina ballroom. A lady in London “ Would it were mine!” says Bertha, Oeaalgiid Adipie,tae Wlie’ taba hoes 1h: b0 lucie beter, he Cane hie an eet crerybody at my table; they would quarrel with | was worth, ina worldly was, auch more thar h, I never was so took aback | Was recentiy conveved from the gay fentit> Then, with. tenah teen tonger. dashed down to where old Martin Bei. | ness. He might be absent fortwo dare, he said, | the Angel Gabriel if he lived in the house with | snv of her other suitors, and tha! he was a good The aeene prostr ated by exlalations from the beawt: eer ith # langh tke music, olie Tived, to ask Lim to tell her of uis kuowl. | but he would te to lewen the tates cde | wd scold a him and tel! him he was al- | To: king. gond hearted ait intelligent enoul to fal green robe which she wore. ‘Them To wear with» bonnet fatklonna eer ter aunt come abont—and the remedy. | young wife was left alone in the midst her ene-| “@¥* dropping his teathers round, if ther | satisty any but an over tastidiou= person of her | Sun ehen 0 trent temmenedineeemoes seo, For the vericst queen of girls.” “SHtold, Ma'ame “Adete,” said. Marine as he | iene without efen soon slight guard as his; COWdn't find anything else to bring up against | cinss.” He was unexceptonable, im short, hare “ the indignant my | eat “ber tele be mop est queen of girls. shaflod his greaey cards, saa laid toeavont te | pronnee eiektrne | fim. But, I've done my best for them that 1 [ring hie unoonqueraste and excestve bashfal- | {ove She tried to sooth, the tndiguarrt that “her false hair was comingoff.”’ she cece, * * * = * ‘) q a ietson the table; “there is more in thi- | Adele was out. It was a dark, hot summer and for them that was under my roof. | ness, which, indeed, was a never tailing source 3 | ered instantly. . 1 4 ofthe neighbors, w under the p» _-) ee a « Blue? sceedingiy common!” ‘sees. Ome tees it | night, and If rver- | M¥ husband and my children was well cared tor | of merriment to the young people of the little | Of the | es = But vory stylisinty mute heename stdenty sks that tay bes ase sa | tlk and Featiens tha a a eee tare eens | wen they lived, nin he snd’ them htiieoner | crete fectccot® wee dor un mh; had micah | me rage Lome Learn ket a written ‘n > The hat is imported, and uo harmidone by man? “Heaven sends sick- | evening he grew worse; and thongie Jeammerte ; tat U buried, has white marble head-stonesant | And so, when David in his awkward, bianter- bd na ier es ee aiter 4 r presumed doa And just the recherche shade.” hess tous all. But the little Adolphe las no! | had strict commands not to allow madame to | eot-stones, and an iron fence around the lot, | ing. half frightened manner begau slyly to ex the rasepied cap rit ind up the tangied | lie wmtoached his bed, and then snow 2 he A shrug of the stately shoulders, been touched by the Bon Dion. I See the will | touch him, she grew frightened at the condition | #1 a place left for metwixt him and the * «© | hinit is preference for her in vartabs little yaeu, stirred the fire—atiin the most amiable | ccamined by amedioal he ebould certir, A slightly gathering trown: of a wicked woman in this. Hein!” Here she | of the and when madame came into the | Some ne pega Somc~ epee has | ways, such s+ waiting O& Ber to and (vom vi manner possible—and at Inst had the extis! that Mfe wasentinet. ‘Tite x “ Dve had one like it already shufted the cards, aud laid themout witha kind | small parlor which Adele called her own, to | Rude it a little of strain to ine to get along. | ing school. constituting himself her escort wih tion of seeing her mother smbnide tuto her Fock | > Since we came back to town.” of eager distraction of manner, his withered | offer her assistance, Jeannette gladly abandoned | When a woman's back aches with overworking | she went Sundays on horseback to the louely ir and ber asnel wanquilty of epiris. °e7-“Rither a natio: i hands trembling, and his mouth muttering | ® charge that was too heary fur her. and let the | herself to keep her house ih shape, and a dozen | little chureh in the woods. and singling her out “pag omen Le apne wpe | cONMONSSE-Ineuny “Sennemorney anes * This? ‘tis the very Latest,” words Adele could not catch. “Saint Joseph | lady take him from her arias . months are opening at her three times a day, | as the recipient of whatever attentions lie cou She had got a new idea into her head; ani | started here atomee!’” is tle framta. ox: leu As, with unconscious grace, and ail the saints protect ws!” he cried, “the | Sitting there with the child in her lap, coving | like thensittle young bind: that split their heads | find the nerve to pay, at the trequeut quilting | 5, tad of etthing hersel! for another of a Minnesota paper. Timidly little Bertha foreigner—the Englishwoman! Ah, miscry!” | to him alow, soft nursery song in English, the | 2P€% 0 you can almost -ee into thoir empty es in the neighborhood, Ante «id not pursued her traim of thought and her 87 Mayor Havemever’s defi eps forward from her place. “Speak, Father Martin’ What de vou xyam of his pain seemed torher to pars; and | Stomachs, and one wants this and another want: ighten him out of his budding passion br amy | Dor Uea Mer Oras a wadertul tay a leten nee ‘ No rarer produet of iabor mean” cried Adele, grasping his aruy her | wns asit heslere Roca that paroxsym he | that, and provisions isdear aud rent is high, ami | -Low, either by surprise or marked preference, length, stopping and looking keenly at Aunie . Has high-born maiden seen Diack eyes were wi er arched nostrils were | had bitten both his lip and tongue, and the | body to look to. then a sharp word cuts, [ tell | but took it all in the easiest. pleasantest, most Ores bie teetatine die tase ? ee Gye i has fashioned dilated, her lips thin, sinuous, flexible, were | blood was now oozing from his mont, ‘He was | YOU to your heart. | unconscious manner possible. The Is tite i > efitting atairy queen, * - “It mar bea queer notion of mine, Awnie ree sn te een but Pve a faney that man was David W “Tell me plain words, 87 Geo. brew sentenced t , his wife, was con Of Chicago, who has just hanged for the murder of Py pet a * 7 I've seen a boarder make a face at what I set | tered and nudged each other s elbows, and the Fae eas | att thie macanae eeeernl wckiaos mate hia } > ofe;0 hie, when & hall tried te ale be Jest as | young men cracked furtive jobes at the ex- ¥ bent her head and kissed the yale 1 face, | Well As I knew how, and [ haven't cared to eat pase of her timid suitor, but she “ys ap tor with asmile complacent, | newt ‘OMT but if Annies face didu't catch fire th sy. She bent over ther work and ¢ needle throngh so quickly, that the th saupped, and then she didn't have time to tath taken up with BOYS ODD PANTS. BOYS’ ODD VESTS No guile in her bosom sprii my child—dead, ie 5 , q id 2 a on the evening the master brought her home. | his blood on her lips! Do you want more proots: | Ministers come aud wait on everybody, we at. | said “ves,” and had agroed to tatethe r : Tel aot dees oor do: and I said to myself ‘Ha, ha, Martin! you ace | Vampire that ‘she is, ean you deny the evidenge tentive as undertakersatafuneral. It isn’t byt { bility of bringing father and mother « Whee ee on the track, my boy;’ and Ma'ame Adele. 1 | of your own senses.” a little while longer that we are going to be to- on the subject. Darid had not &en to the e table, and a lot ot men dressed up like That had been just one week ago. Annie had glowing with happy prite, : ner ¥: o Sai A ore ing myself all the rest im hi So Wiad bearted: inbopoudant ‘ ; me : | two chifdren—one fourteen, the other mas Inte hor wa ting carriage low roe tte” Vampire?” said Martin, inja | and the blood that wason Inte Tipe was trang- | # thing myself all th Ma'wink of aise Meiatt, | Western late, ezcme oat wel eel te eoeoeier Joe might have Ht any Sadiber of cantieg by Why do ron spend much money on yo indy sweepe ankic, “It iy what L believed !"" “it is | While she still o i voman’s | And when, when you come down the next morn- | him out of Lis shyness as far as she consistently |", ‘ - Mt earane | wile’s ea @imen of a erigh in And Bertha, standing reinctant, what I knew. Ab, ty Adsiphe! eee on tite | heart touched ith eae eerie, Bet Not are. | ing all the boanters stare at vou and wonder | could. Prsicontir: poorer Brent arated SSRN | Sab alee was the roptes “abe world hare dons Scifice s ring sigh day when the masicr brought the fair-skinned | Yislon of motherhond, Adele followed be‘oki | “Hat makes vou look so low-spirited, and why | She never scemed to notice any of his anfor- | the ese of i . | as mivehfor me, and tmore too, with fo she can bat drones of, ppd ema Martin and some others of the village, Pashat | YOU don’t look as happy and talk as cheerful e | tunate blunder helped him | "Pears eo fo me; cause them big whiskers Anit pleasures that pas her by: “Those red lips don't come by nothing, | into the roum. i one of them rich ladies that has dinner-parties, | along considerad Keached frat Roamaee fo mee; Geese trom big. whiskers ¢ PT 5. pe Ma’ame Adele,” said Martin, noddinghisheat, | “Behold her!” she cried where they've nothing todo but give a few or- | the culminating point, one moon lighted Au- Seely eye samane ye, oe oy Oy big paws! } Odd Boys’ Jacket: ‘aan Siled with the brightest things; ‘Look at them—.they glisten with blood! { «aii | her arm, and toreing her ders, and somebody comes and cooks their din- | tumn evening, as thes were walking hore to- en Mek hua eae welaat j But Bertha is happy-bearted = so from the beginning, and the chin—hehold her in the act! id someboriy else comes and puts towers | gether from a eorn husking. ‘ she was, trying tv coax Ue | re ; ; thread through the eye ag: — : have never left it! at's wi “No! no!" roared the crowd, hoarsly, s ther. and I want to say to you, gentlemen, as | house since. Probably he felt very mach like a $ ‘ Homeward she waiks alone theca sar, Machine Adele, Watch ant | t® rampire a creature cursed by Gi, ait | Ltau-to as to the other, and Se have aid | dog whe ars vente ueone promisesors | tapestbe Mm. Sobre emt ow: OFS SUE On ENTIa STOCK OF Just a few tear-drops welling see; and you'll Hind that the cards have spoken | the enemy of mau: away wih neo te pit! | £9 our two ladies that I feel more obligated to | per-on whose sheep fold Le has just after all. Doyou, Annie? Well, of course we ee CUOTEERG Softly her pillow greet trae.” She must die as she has made others to die!” you for the way you've treated me than I know | Thus it happened know it wasn't. But then I do wonder who it | BOYS ALL Woor JACKETS 2 But care comes with the morrow, | “And when we have found, Martin? “What is the meaning of all this?” said Ma- | ¥€TY well how to put into words. Boarders somo- | were knew was Intended for? And ¥ wonder if yor don't “BOYS” ALL Woon JACKETS be And Labor's rest ix sweet. * | Adele, in a hoarse whispe dame Cabanel, rising and facing the crowd with | mes expect too much of the lady that provides know something more about it than you se YS’ ALL-WoeL JACKETs.. 2 Surely the waiting angels The old man shufied his caris again. the true courage of au Englishwomen. «What | fer them. Some days the meals are better than fit to tell!” ; axp (Some say that such there he) | aiavhem we bave tound, Ma’ame Adele?” he | harm have I done to any of you that you shonui | Otbers: it can’t help being so. Sometimes the * Me, mother” ae . Perfeet in the blinstul deena ina paid slowly. “You know the old pitont there | Come about me, in the absence of my husband, | Pfvision market isn't wel! supplied, sometimes * Yes," me mother, “you was mighty ancions | $1 > REL Feet FETs se The broken reality. | by the forest—the old pit where the lutins rin | With these angry looks and insolent words!” the fire in the cooking stove doesn’t burn so well glee to get me an’ Papott to Aunt Kath’s St ALL-WOOL VESTS...” Mary . in and out, and where the White Ladies wring “What harm hast thou done?” eried old Mar- | #4 it does other days; sometimes the cook isn’t | reply to that stammered query of his with which ALL E ii but [not ced You was slicked up extra Bebew the necks of those who come upon them in the | tin. “Sorceress, as thon art, thou hast bewitched | *0!ucky as she might be. And there is board- | we liave prefaced this narration for ali you weren’t going.” ax Ider shook the crowd, anda | don'tcaleulate there is any boarding-house in | talizing little laugh, and when, rendered des+ dark! Old Squire Moore, of course, heard ot it : ; oan that sounded in itse Bakue 5 heaven, I hope I shall some time or other meot | perate by this, he tried to revenge himself, at 0 ei ly al ; ‘Tas sepagpaaen bt | the Romer tthe wren tmmmortic: | hr on cn bats Hom | ten that hanadt round my tate one year hres | every oméat wien us tong us was se | fiw. thet te taue great deight ty alluang i to che & good fellow at | and the like, ‘The distance, too, fromher own | _ “To the pit they cried. “Let the demons | “"other, all togethcr, where there is no fauit- | cure of the coveted bliss and stooped his head - heir narrow coffins, she knew All Colored Seidiers or Sailors, or their Legal Repre: Monsieur Jules anel was not the most | nene and cared charm ng man of he was generally he bottom de | moonlight? Perhaps the White Ladies will do | Our good master, and, vampire as thou art, thou | TS Who are always lay Wait for the days | . «Mother is going over to Aant Tut! Here Aunie lost her neediec, and went dowa | BOYS’ WING OVERCOATS 86 to 68 THE FATE OF MADAME CABANEL. | S2t% {2 the English wise of Monsieur Ca- | nourishest thyscit on our blood. Have we not — Oe Lae pat cate a they | father to spend the Sryeene, Smt she wa on the floor to find it. prices $10 to ©18. s MAD! 4 NEL. | vanei; whe knows’ proof of that at this very moment? Look at thy that te totag tea, SA epi. with Pee tae on tuthers ae ortire aii bas “Now, 2 *her mother went a | BOY~ WING OVERCOATS $6 to §S—torm r 7 : “They may,” said Adele, gloomily. mouth—cureed broucolaque; and here lics thy | that is tying to serve ee see eae Nine done rok Tisekth wed Wee at gittin’ old yw that. but Th pcm gpd d Teer ted not invaded, seience had noten- | «Courage, brave woman; they siall,” said | viet, who accuses thee in his death ‘on. I ceigues Fa ok cae ee ee fee ee Aas lost my eyesight yet, nor my hea BOYS’ WING OVEROOATS §6 to §8—foraw lightened. the little hamlet of Pieuvrot, in Brit- | Martin. Fanny laughed scornfuily. «1 cannot conde- Mghited ae Tore met duite so spry and quick OAT haM ane oASéd Botdhé hie Rout seni I've surmised a little somethin’ about these | PDces 61 to #15 : of whe heed GLmnle, Ignoraut, supersti- | ‘The only really pretty place abont Pionvrut | scend to answer such folly, "sho suid lifting her Doarder wrote that Girt book, oP tee nk | a Dont coe ere cova reply: | coin's on you an’ David afore wove, A WOOL SUITS erlling at trae Senectinte, lived there, and the luxuries of | was the cemetery. To be sure, thece was tim | bead. “Are you men or Md asked me about. But now I'm going toctee | throngh putting Ping: te mete Gee aes | What ar m for? Out with PE Ber Be ome heree fixillzation were known to them as little as its | dark gloomy forest, which was grandin iteown | ‘We are men, Madame,” Seren, tie | taking boarders. Ident belloverructl think |. Of coats Dani cor ote ae it, 1 tryin’ to come it over earning. They toiled hard all the w tl mysterious way, and there was the broad wide | Miller; “and being men we must protert our | Pe nah ‘arders. 1 don't believe you'll thi (oon bate ae . ae went regular to mass inthe litte chapel. vial, where you might wander fora long sum- | Weak ones. We have al! had onr duuit-, ant | much About whut Ididu't do, because Leouldu't, | tan ne mr smal! feminine Machinval HABLE BROTHERS, pote SE en ee Saar iss mare onus than 1. with three Netle toxcrve vor. I hope Got will blew all shot ed est as to petition nwkwar Pap ah pee FASHIONABLE TAILORS od tng ue man would care v a “the aven betoi er 2 ane we . plone at SE cee ae gs “ 4 “ng D te they took ail the unknown, not as magnidi and for the rest, the little patelwes of cute | are convinerd:* ae ee Bnd elnglS nan eune ich and poor,married | which was at once refused in the most inexora- ther ‘a talkin’ t about it ‘ant ~3 Comnre of Tre ax» Y Sr The sole link between them and the » Sra ANe Surrounding waste, and where they | ‘lone my best tosoothe hin” said Madame Ga | marred. My husband, liget to heaven stoner | yoursei€of will you? Disc chinks deaavtrce | “But, ee Vottce. prominent —_— ar-fates Ca | Eaised their poor crops. were not very lovely. | tel, with unconscious pathos. . or later, anil sinte Tre rcne Fan bored (en Baaotling scound We ‘Smith at Deacgn | Conclusion, +f’ want yon to tell D par excellence of ti So Madame Cabanel, who, for all the soft indo- ‘No more words!” cried Adele, holding her Scamnnngeak Yee lovedt Drone ler and a 4 eatersde, eeriatie ta fant Tce Me ioce | rather he'd’ not make such a mistake ae ae e pri ; im | lenee that had invaded her, hail the Englishwo- | by the arm she had never let go. > the pit | orhaps I should moot’ of thes to ee hen tat: 2 . ve not fore 7 ceuin. I don't like the feel of his big whisk COLORED SOLDIERS AND SALLORS. fo Ht Sometimes went to Paris, whence | man’s love for walking and fresh with her, my friends, if you would not sce all Eaoen Medea ad ieaet ab matin nt tae TT | Secon eet, auntet Yaxta about my face, and, moreover, Ldon't approve oreiale aaed eed eee yun & cargo of novelties ‘that ex- | the pretty ittie graveyard a deal. She had mine has died, as our good | Watton tocin” Meera noe ian Kut farther nal war be f br atan- | Ofpromiskus kissin’ - — cited envy. admiration or fear, according to the | no sentiment connected with it. Of all the deat “ fo7in a better world. And, though I zing little Staph, nud When reed tat: | David never heard the last of that kis: in the degree of intelligence in those who beheld them. | who laid there { | | i ‘ ; —~ happened to be present. He would fromthe Treasury Dopart- t, man, | home just enough for’ her. ew | take their own finding with the tood and no occasion for it, and | triumphantly over his straggling prisoner, the | Cemmed - y “ © Lceu isetied i eritiemcat with ha pped short amak | over the nisin wacken belt of priate | Auick as thought Adele pinioned the strong | \f Tdo meet them, and you are there, or any- | rosy, langhing face wanished Maldenls frou Fa eg ants ened g tp wwite’s tart ened poten e-black beard. inclined to obesity | mountains beyond was Bue Tuite arms, and before the girlcould utter more | SMCs there is ansthing Tean do fur you | nnder his arm and was off and away up the | evident discomfiturcand bis w her father aud | CLAIMS POR PAY, BOUNTY, rrize Tada of good living, he had need have some | The Pieuvrotines, however, did not andcr- | than one ery, Legros had ‘placed his brane | = * © —Poet of the Breakfost Table. fardon path leading to the houge almost before | Tok ule fue ot her aweetheast, and thes bethot : v lien TENT behind the bush to compensate for his | stand this. It was inexplicable to them thatany | hand over her mouth, ‘Though this destraction he could realize what had happened. <2) | teen Woala beak apo Sete ether ene ek | MONEY, &., however, Rursonal charms. He way not bal, | one, not out of her mind, should go continually | Of a monster was not the murder of a human | Poking Fun at s Railroad. Forges moment David, whe stood xastag | 5. toms ran dete thats checks and who have not received the homever; be was only common and untovely. | to the cemetery, not on the day of the dead.and | being, in his mind, or in the mind of any there, | , A correspondent of the Richmond Guide thus | ruefully after her, thought of pursuit and a re- | St vermind, David,” Mrs. Moore woubl say | are directed. in order to apoedy pay ineut of ths sams ft Bethune tie hye tal Femained an- | not to adorn the grave of one she loved: only to | still they did not care to have their nerves dis: | !vtuorously describes the manner in whieh an | Capture. But before he had Yime to pat his y, to’ the abashed Jover, “let thei | by this OMice, and # He'd have been only too glad to have a y ore he con ndsome housekeeper, | sit there and wanler among the tombs, looking | turbed by cries that sounded so human a» Ma. | accident was prevented on the railroad betwees | plan into exeention his tormentress, after | |! | . yd peep ee poe tors tngern Revi Soleo ayo find gloomy, that | that ty” and Petersbarg: ‘The engineer had stopping to give one mocking farewell wav of Stew te place thirty vests Moon He had | Without further expense by Claimants, os het. under thatr | ohn wertiond. dreadful cortege took its way to the forest, car. ten off to snowball a chipmunk, and the con- | her hund from the front porch, vanished inside Lard work to get a kiss from me then. 1 hope | J their Bt ‘ taied to mo mii Re Wiad the WRG Neneh | son. ha Se ike The speaker. onet.e- | Tying its living loud, gagged and helpless asit | ‘etor was minding « widow's aby od torget | done but to seen reluctaStly: omy that ast | the occurrence will be a escon to vou an" An- | {7st their Naxcrs, with Post Orwice Avonses to one dare so much as bint like t | sonef, had is, it had bee a i is ‘ain hay 0 A y fro vd i ~ . ines” She was a proud, ind of womens ond for on Te ae ee ‘Adele and old ‘Martin. it wes eet oo ae on a down grade, and was started bit at a ter. | take the eoad homeward. . nie agin the wn-policy of under hand doins’ of | A¢juiant General U. §. Army, Washing. | | ' had strong notions of her own dignity, which no Ras down at La Veuve Prieur's, where the | soval animosity as the instinctive self-defence | Tifle rate, every bit of four miles an hour, [| If you could have looked into the family sit- | 8! Sorts, seein’ ax how they're Kable to ent. ton, D, €. Cas Serato distur So. whatever the under- | hamlet collected nightly to discuss the day's | Of fear that animated them. ‘They were execw. | ShOUld think. We were just half w mile above | ting room at Squire Moore's story, botore | elt cases, in kissin? the wrong one in thedtar thar of the place might be, small soings, ami where the main theme, ever | tloners, not enemies; and the exegutioners of a (heater, and the first thin we know, thers be- | eight Calock on, that same evening you wow i nha ne ‘They should also state in got wind of it. since she had come among the: Ma- | more righteous law tnan that allowed by thi ig, BO om wi 1° up the switch- 2: you. 8 ompany and Regiment th: Presently, and quite suuddenty, Jules Caban- | dame Cabauel. Se en ee | Satan here ‘one they dropped off | tender, we were turned of into the Coalfield | after supper clearing away wasover for the sit. Fun at the Lotus. on. <eiuarah Che exouise wes rendered, E. D. TOWNSEND. Adj want Gener! mger time than wsnal | | -Wamler about among the tombs just like | till their numbers were reduced to six, of whom | 103d, and went down the track at full speed. | ting room was also the room where the daily | | A New York letter to the St. Louis Globe says came home with a wile. Adele had | what, Jean Lesouel? Said Martin itttaine Legros was one, and Lessouef, who had lost his | !™agine our consternation, when just at thie | meals ofthe family were eaten. The leaves of | Mark Twain was dined a day or two siuce at twenty-four hours’ notice only to prepare, and | Then rising, he added, in low bat dioacct | oni sisters Suet moment we heard the wifistle, not haif a mile | the old-fashioned dinner table had been let | the Lotus Club, and a very pleasant enterta fhe task scemet heavy. But she got throagh | voice, every word falling clear and clean. “+1 | | The pit was more than an English mile from | ahead of us, of the coal train.’ We were para. | down, and the table itecit. covered with a | ment itwas. He pretended to read ee she knew her mas- | will tell you like what, Lesoucf—like a vam~| the maison Cabanel. It was a dark and loue- | 1¥zed with terror—here were two trains on the | bright oiled cloth, set back ‘against the wall. | script his speech, which he declared altogether War Derantwest, ‘ H i i C., Pebrvars 1. 107. Al = ; arranged, and even | pire! La Femme Cabanel has red lips and red | Some spot, where not the bravest manof all that | *#™!e track, approacl.ingeach other at the dizzy | The crumbs had been carefully brused with « | impromptu and ‘the amused mistakes made in __182%e placed a voluuts of Rowersen the sa. | cbceks, and Marsune Adele's tate Rephew ts | awembly ‘would have dered to go alone ufter | speed just mentioned. “Evidently our time had | turkey wingfrom the neat home-made carpet, | deciphering it—each pomp te ea hh m table. perishing before your eyes. La Femme Caba- nightfall. but a multitude gives courage, said | Come. In a few short hours the engines would | 8d Annie's workstand was drawn up in front | the lust—excited the most uproarious laughter | GBANDEstT SCHEME OF THE 4GE: Strange @owers for a bride,” sai. self | nel has red lips and red checks, and she sits | old Martin Briolic, and a dozen Malwart meet, and then—destraction! of the ample and blazing fire of hickory logs | from one end of the table to the other. Beane little Jeannette, the -gitl, who wassome- | for hours among the tombs. Can you read the | men, led by such a woman as Adele, were not With great presence of mind, a minister on | which cracked checrily in the old-fashioned | he did not hke to make any earent ae i times brought into the house to work, as she | riddle. my friends? For me it is as clear as the | afraid of even Iutins or the white ladies board organized a praver-meeting. Pale, but bagi wont : pct hp egret vl a | $500,000 CASH GIFTS! noticed Lellotrope—called in France “la fleur , blessed sun. As swiftly as they eould for the burden they | ¢a!m, the doomed band of passengers sat, and | A bountifully piled tray of red-cheeked ap- compelied to listen to from Reid, Hay, Bowles, des veuves’—searlet poppics, with a bunch of | “Ha, Father Martin, you have found the | bore, and all in utter silence, the cortege strode | ‘ugh with the very shadow of death upon | Plesand a plate full of cracked walnuts were | and Watterson, frightened we ee | see. arene tin. belladouna, and auether of aconite—searcely | word—like a vampire?” said Lesouetf, with a over the moor, owe or twoof them carry ing rude be ge voices in sca hymn. per gE a arr to et bg gen — Sree aa hee concocted for the solemn 000 ently S10. flowers of bridal welcome or ee. Ney- | shudder. torches, tor and “Send for the baggage-master,” said 4 young X anes by her ow asion. | ectheless, they stood where Adele had placed | “like « vampire!” they all echoed with a | was not without fee cate sd pe aand the was men with pend amills. Si, oh nt Rol Gainey: Timed’ with bine, | Mosaics of Rela as 6 seen ke bad grown ae them: and if Monsieur Cabamel meant any- | groan. and nearer came tothe fatal bourne, and | (;W1S*"" was asked. silk. accustomed toediting avewspaper thathe could | Coser asthority of apocial legislative art of Marck with which he ‘ordered, thes ont of hin stents | Martin, Brioite. MCai ie te catty aad | heavier grew the weight of their vietim. "She | oy Hecwiee WE afe all aout to pass in our | | Onone side, ‘than techy nl ct pearecite ail | aotame Hap nal rien co oon aes AND GIF ie! e is si fartin Briolic. + i 4 i Z . i - C Vv, y } Tadao acer aoctersand nothing, anus | athe Gags” OTN St M2 mk 1 SaAt | ad ng coamas, Sere psz and ow Tay as if | icersbadx wept. Prom the rear platform wo | fae wari She tat feneiog Webtiarde aah | Mather Se lees | REAR TIGLSEE smiled with the look of a person whois assist- | ‘Faith, and you did,” they answere spoke of this or of aught else. Not a word was J " : 3 co when } ; f = hich said n te BI knitting as she rocked and refreshin erselt | the Young Men’s Christian He cen. Midanstond. Such the true bearing ie not | Ts Se tne ceed which Martin and Adete | Cigtanged between thom. on, aod Aida galt amine te ceca bee | ace sak thon witha sentra erent | ceca ne aes eanens Aesoeaien. He can maserstoed. _ oa ak mbadauaiy tes 5 The way. ov darker, the distance between | "Ar this moment aray of hope dawned upon us. | apple which lay within easy reach, just upon | banker in Paris,and for his assurance in trying Madame Cabanel was an Englishwoman; | aa Seeneee so sedulously had at last taken | them and the lace of execution shorter, and at | 1 had just finished writing my will on the back | the corner of the table; or touc! ina cares- | to reinstate himself in public opinion by writ- young, pretty, amd fair as an augei. | root, and the Pieuyrotines would have been last they reac! the border of the pit where | of 4 y: isiting card, nent Uhected ooo lady | sing manner with the tip of her foot a sleek, | ing for the Sprit Republican, He apolo- “L« beautedu diable,” said the Pieuvrotines, | ready to aceuse of atheism and tmmorality hon | this fearful monster, this vampire—poor inno- | fy the act ot detaching her bustle. Fisting the | lazy looking grey cat that lay purring and | gized for his inability to continue his Mery | declared tide oubted their decision, and hal | cent Fanny Cabanel—was to be thrown. As | nrivie einen ue cOmposed of sight Kumtrea | bituking onthe hearth rug befose hee want of time, saying that those anxious to | declared ge pretty M Cabanel was = they lowered her the light of their torches fell papers and a hair mattress, uuder her arm, the Annie sat on the other side of the table deftiy | hear the remainder might step down stairs, ies tbe Br lap ing woman with | on her face. i Lt i | | Eerste snaeeed throngh the car. ; her needie in and out of a long piece | where he had stationed a number of agents, and ae Spee > = = naturally fair com- ‘Grand Diew tied Legros, taking of his ‘We followed her anxiously. cambric, and with ber head asbusy as | purchase tickets to his Wednesday evening lec- Wipne little Adstphe grew. pal 4 pater, | 2, abe indent : : She climbed up on the tender and then over | her hands with trying to contrive some clever | ture, price 35 cents- 2 h complexion | a phe grow, Daler and paler, | «+A vampire cannot die unless the evil spirits | tre engine. It was very interesting and thrill- | way ot incidentally mentioning the visit, which | _ ‘This tone of badii was kept up during the augishwoman. Unlike their own expe- | thinner and thinner; the fierce summer sun | take her, or she is buried with a stake thrast ing to see her climbing the wheels and brass | She was now momentagily expecting, to her | di Reid spoke of Watterson as an accom. twas therefore more Likely to be evil | told on the half-starved dwellers within those | throngli her body,” said Martin Brivlic, senten- things,on her way tothe cow-catcher. It re- | mother, without exciting the suspicion of its i poker player, who, while the cards were L aaefecling which had sprang up | foul mud buts, surrounded by undrained | tiously. aie minded me of a country girl getting over a wire | being a pre-arranged aifair, She would have rote editorials for the Courier Jour- ast her at first sight ——- it = | pr ryan ge beeen yr tbsrntionrmeninag “y be t ie tie look of it,” said Legros, and | fence. But never mind about that now Let | given @ good deal to have been able to say in Watterson returned the compliment by Mire Se cine | aocters : ok ie | 0, s8id some others. ‘ : cow- | an off-hand manner that she wouldn't wonder Reid a renegade Kentuckian, who Bee eee et ee eee at te eek ee eeenecen hols, shook his |” ‘They had taken the bandage from the mouth catoner_ itor on by Se ke en BE COW. | ir aae, winkires were to drop in, as he was in attacked bimerif Gea grest moral Gages a beaate | pone Bay oka pti hed both: poor irl, and as abe lay In the flickering hand, the noble maiden tied the bustle on the | the habit of calling occasionally on Saturday Ady hey a that immorality bad : i! i sa bop evening atabout this time. recoll ceased to be remunerative. | Mat was the matter with the child and with | white with the whitenessof death a litte return | S8afP Drow with the other. tueconeseot the | with a twinge ot conscience how hard ahe hel | Bowles usserted that it had come tohis know!- paper ye dtm ram pang tel Passed over Hag uook them as if the wind nad | afternoon the collision came oft. Protected by | tried to persuade the old lady to accompany her edge that Mark Twain was an imposter, that he ered: Met the bustle, the e ive l p, Buel DB romised visit te Aunt Kuth’ never been in the wie! nds, which ve oe | Halen sugar mana anton ve | ney neha ean hares tons | atu wo megs P| nthe herfarenarmnge a's cing apa | arcomted rhs meting ted letting Si: | ‘Taal, 10400 Ota, a Cah id this one eve "i — eorice am 3 eit to undering across the pla hey counted two, - of “neurally,” which had intimidated her from | quently on that subject. “He pane capers pele ige Rgentpicalppncen ll meg yoo "them truce He had made the | OU: *t, and they were now ouly four unarmed | —Sroxs op Deata.-The Academy of Sciences | venturing out into the damp night air; and also | meet au ancient New England lady, aformer | 7. 1.4, in diets Gane 2 kak ae oe Wor Mastin Betetio | theury that Feuny eas escrone poisoning both | MM; with Martin and Adele to make up the | of Paris, in 1870, offcred 4 prise of 20m france | how she kad. plead headache at an exeue for | res of the Islands, who had, she said, | 42; HCNDEED TUOUSAND TIekErs ONY aon oupeted tie ion 8 her bes fim ineank he | Number. Between the vengeance of man, and | for some simple and postive signs'of death, | net goingherself. She knew that her mother | boarded with Mark Twain. Twain she repre- | \)) bc imucd. a lage portion of See the miserable engineer, straining | forwards at intervals in her low rocking chair, | his acquaintance when ary pen. engin wo @ praiseworthy punt: mis~al. and signed herself a travers. L si dia “Penf!" said Martin Briolic, the of i of the lithe cemetery: - wi Which are alreaily nd a the power and malice of the wood-demons. thet X é ‘as quite sharp enough to draw her own infer- | sented as one of the «‘most virtuousest” of men, | Sui. % even excepting Meusiemr le | — Lp per ge eyo pagBres “mathe 4 courage faded, their ce of mind de- peice f apply. ‘The most practical ry satic: | ences from these two facts and the adilitionsl | who attended morning prayers regularly, who PRICE OF TICKETS: Momscae eRe rte rise, ig que | ha gemma ert. | kame davan cence are ti | ear alin (apes ri Mea | one Sur ie tat ih more anal | Seeewpemannere cok and ivayvet | ws en ge, Mack gs, a ; ise in his, nt ie larkness of ty 6 na 4 3 Pac, of e tos nit ' to at 90% 3 bs $2. ¥ ‘$ was neither Martin's. nor the Cure’s. He knew | As for Monsieur Cabanel, he was arich man | the others fled over the plain, while the horse? ra cL Vuchent Avchie Te decane cel oer shall not dare to teil her now,” she said to “1 dislike, madam, to dash your hopes,” said | No on es a FaAE BiSSonsces eerie teak oes eortan Fever Legace pene eh — poo! es soon Lineal pe eee hearer and nearer. Only Adele and | fact that no matter how profound the syncope herself. ++ She'd be sure to think that I wanted orca y Sasha Riper ding yor cea range tae per- | sothie Banaves ap Weeeenee mpeetipe te ore. y } Li Tson ‘ : t now! wi rm man | f P é beasts tha eat ihm te inde poner Pemgetnoabe yg oer of Goanting coche or ny _— Tegclenpe gonry ae or how death-like the pei cy Ss yg to get her out of the way, sothat I might have | sonal a nder satisfactory resnits. The object of thi nation. cout: . ; nucnlatin eoatiness eeperee David all to myself.” So, like a wise iittle fish man, but not a erael one: a man whose own | self in he passion and revenge, und cont aa ‘ete ol ; yu in the earth. He | pleasure’ was his supreme law, and who could | dead body of her! victim more clade She | wus Hotdead. All that is necessary, there- | Puss, she was silent, springs of water lay fur « knew, too, fore. is to tie a string firmly around the finger |. Ili ventare my word on it, yon wonld not phich. Sy tects lcsd car » where treasures could be had on | not imagine, still less brook, oppposition, or the wanted no concealment, she had done her work, nosed lood have wondered nosr bashful young farmer's a the roc! . ; plunging wp to them, Jules Cabanel the first DW ell y Annie Moore as she sat sewing by the fire that of draw: aud moment, and come out again hefore too late; | before. Coarsely-moulded, cominon-natured as | follow ‘by the doctor and four gardes champe? =e rue a Se Re a 5 hes frosty night in November. She had. just be- ayton A and he had seen with his own eyes the White | he was, he loved her with what strength and | tees” Guates Pes oP fore supper, indulged in what a Western SS ae Ladies dancing inthe moonlight, and the little | passion of poetry nature had given him. But | \“Wretches! murderers!” was all he said as d would®call a ‘fixing up’ A neat fitting dark in the form of which will be sree a lutins, playing by the pit at the edge | the quality of his love was sorely tried when, | he flung himself from his horse, and raised the S7-Grimes says ever since the epidemic he | chintz dress, look! a@s fresh as when it had of cost to Noy a omar af e wood. And he had a shrewd suspicion as | now Adele, now the doctor, hinted myste- | pale face to his 1i; has put red flags out all around his house on | first came out at the vill: store, a to late Governor of Kea- to ae: aang ase blickhearted men of La | riowsly.the one at diabolical’ influences, and «*Master,”” said Adele, “she deserved to die, ing to bed at night, and up to date he has not | white linen collar and ‘cute and a coqui tucky, io whom all Creche-cn bois. the rival hamlet, was @ loup- | the other at underhand proceedings of which it | Sie isa vampire, and che who hes killed vee | fone burglared by a single burglist, frilled of white muslin and ablue neck yoy should be addremend gatou, if ever there was one on the face of the | beheoved him to be carcful—especially careful | child.’ #7-The throwing of a teacup on the part of | ribbon ted in a ‘cunt bow, where the chief | &ny outside home, and lived and there. 4 A earth—and no one doubted that! He had other | what he ate and drank, and how it was S pre | | Fool!” cried Jules Cabancl, Singing off her | one anthony t his wife’s head in New | items of Anmie’s toilette. But she looked as | As rents rose and his business—second-hand iz IAN Vice Prost, Sparkie Deiter’ mystic kind; so that | pared. and by whom; Adele adding hints abont | hand. Oh, iy beloved wite, thowete tnt oo York may result fatally. It hit her In the tem- | «weet and pretty as if hours had been spent in | Clothes selling—increased, he had to cut down Fobens S peoveRe BAe ene. Bin Bellic shal word went for something. | the pertdioumess of Engishwpma 1h the | harm to ma: or bea-t, to be murdered now Uy | ple. Bhs fell nsensiblo, and dying. counting tin, leovautjovnle. Marciahywnry, | hie Sod cxpenes sin Wee spt to movesnte for : , , Fann 5 as now, e devil and men worse than beasts !’’ ‘brown hair was carried shinii folds e cavanel, woul wae Ske! pe tReciat atten- | complexions. Love his wife as he might, this | "she was killing they’ said Adele “Ask | ,S7-After asking your name in the state of | gold-brown sand canght was noarty iom anywhere but at sa me state until at the close of last summer he ddead-alive, ignor- | constant dropping of poison 4 D Mon. | Atkansas, the natives are in thehabit of further | #8y from her warm red cheek and caught up Am yag Fn sat, aud gossipping place as Pioavrot’ What | some eiect, = Pemon was nok withoot | Monsieur Ie Doctens what elled thee, inquiring, in & confidential tone, “Well, now, | im the meshes of a silken net at the back. history she had was commonplace enough. She | One evening, when Adele, in an azony, was “Do not bring me into this infamy,” said the | “88t was your name afore yer moved im these wassimply an aan and E kneeling at hi t ? was dozing over her Knitting. rau food” . young, Sal say ‘eer, where ens ey Lees walh—orying, “Why Gi you lear | ocr ene ne rom the Goad. cto | ag-Atarecead convention of the Pittsbar ere a fo greene | Say seams but when he got it, ttonly Jv yo a not D mimi as she nodded te and fro—now crush- piarrelled with hes and left her stranded in me Oe such ns she t—I, 0 loved sou, who be here. You Bave made yourself her Judge and | Diocese, of the ee ee, of ing the voluminous white satin bows on her we BA ge ae es Se eae — macried Monsieur Jules Cabanci as the tect | Caps srl wiv cake oe Jana | EX(cutionsr, Adele, and you must answer for it | clergymen Ler ee cap against the back of her chair—now any food after paving for the medicine, 80 | pr, §. D. Mewe's Arabian Milk Care ar mel as the best | a: the graves, sucks your blood and | to the law.” of the 8: school system and a return to the ‘timoct falling while her fat hands at | he wandered out toa horse-chestmut tree ana For Consumption, thing she could do. Bo one else, she | our chill’s—she who has only the devil's beauty | “You say this too, master?” said Adele, plan of instruction in feroilies only. length dropped inher lap, and her ball | filled bimesif with ita luscious frait. He re- ‘and Colds in @ few hours, ibe isceeeemereaaeccta | anger oi un | pO ota eee ait, | alt eden: | Sg Rocce Pr Set | SORA i Snr | oem Omran obr tne tution; and her middle-aged suit. | electric force. ite ponte aeaslapaubne-you endl father, wi into be) . | Dre ‘ “9 Tonic Gi fa aemaip sa | yee Seater | ig cl woes ts | ar tate oy ar ue oar | aie me Orne | tr Sree eae y See oe clea. ee . MM . . a cheerfully and faithfully. She did not know, | heart leaped with . Was lier ze to be Mana there is to be no vengeance for our bork Ton: in of cannibalism int" #0 and nats cae Chonsuneh wore te live for that sum, and he ~ ‘Square cp, aud makes the : 'wain, in speaking londly abet how ror of he Randaome Ronsokeeper, Adsia! | renewed! Wan her fival to be. dispossssol? Cr aa “a serious for’once, and solemnly declares | self assured manner, that Annio, rendered ner- | thought he obeyed. Ce Sones cnustincen | Ea “Geel house! little are— —? is wie aa grows her master Sasseikied that Restioe’ wets | “Breet evening Monslear Cabanet's man: | man!" said’Monsicur Cabanch, sterniye hangzy sows dajotnaaroeh oor ld" perwoast | soream wod eet her foot on Madame Pars’ teit | & SShether the team did wot by aying bg ag oe ty well | ner changed to his young wife, but phe was too ‘Aid our past years of eT friend."* who in turn gave vent still more loudly to her Reet ay hg self uaer Uananne seed with Y him—it, was 80 ca Ciatnuets SS termed fo thepate Mee of his | worth of national urcency velonging’ ts his |. Ail these thee Sabine Sieer rapidly | Scatarkt tons be is somsownens te Amoricg, a bridal boqnetonfered her poppies, heiiotrop>, tuatter of untroubled trenton ony that ‘Then my place is vacant,” said Adele, with | Mer, we enn Sees ees ‘Sonktens Srtied wildly fn an rect posture, ne Hate we not a claimant among us? ir cup tad to eons the predominant charac- Seesqueuen aah nb coo ae a ee rubies, i for redeauption. . ing 7 Per. <ap Pees S7-A dranken man who threw hs little son tortstic o¢ Malame Cabanel, it woald easi- | good-naturedly as she Sa" Messenger boys ia the Pennsylvania : ‘four years hot stove, received but nesaof temper. Nou saett ie, cement on 4 if tbe bet a} lature are sent out after ink" saa when they Pine boy Age Pra Vegfig amd ‘dase mentinthe Yorkville, N.Y, Tines of her foce and gure, in her mild “blac roturnv th i the anid aid lslyly passed 1 Beas sh irho canit bet = a ‘court. beret moe mors peta groan: ABI chat wes good.” © | eight. TPH quam wo whe it fer auld a Gorebeuted by 2 Chicago’ paper: French temperament, and espectaily a7" An unmarried man, w! realize | demurely, time taking the one ‘are a good many of them. k Adele. “Tt seems almost impossible to make mada pn Fa Lg — her understand pv ‘was insulted,” the housekeeper uscd to aay, ith diodain, we