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wr the Bveni shawl. Georgy tried not to feel the least ti him. Her infatuation—if such ithad been—was | Railroad One of the Hand, | And, Rever tell him you're not his ngo’s Newspaper Office. Inconstancy A VISION. of pent 9 yr nyo re her. “ the = an end! = = = more. oy’ oe Sketches of a mother— ae = At Vicier Hi _— gi <a The neck of the peacock, ; ° ant Ap; Ways a sense grati- jose upon new happiness, came = a ” “1 am bere.” > ‘The Iris's dyes, a tude towards her protege for having forsorne tO tion of his lost situation. He thrast the BY THE AUTHOR OF “PLUCK. «« I'm nearly at the end of my breath. You'll | ee ee The light in Re sa, BY JOMN EENRY BORER. fascinate either of her own marriageable boys, | money in his pocket. By-and-by he would tell a kise me once for the sake of the old, old days.” Translated for Appleton's | ‘The April-day skies 1 Sine tes enum and this gratitude cropped out in ‘active kind: | her all “You wont throw me over for this, Polly,| She bent her head down to the poor wousded Eetince sosiiner a they ve lovely, saw these as ness under the exul a she felt over Paul's ‘You won't mind waiting supper for an hour— | after all these years?"” breast, and put her lips to the soiled, bearded tof the Paris | As all of them are The world below me laid, match. will you, John’ she asked, as she led him i The tone was one of passionate entreaty, and | face. Ray ich is owned by Victor Hago and hie Bat for the chance And the lights of the many cities Georgy moved easily about the well furnished | + 1 am going to give you something nice—by- | Polly trembled. | cci Now at last you're mine, Polly, and noone | son? qine Rayye! is the largest of the radical And the change that are there? Slowly began to fade. rooms; somehow she seemed just fitted for sach | and-by—and—I think Mr. Haliburton will be} “I’m not throwing you over, Dennis; try and comes between.” journals of Paris; it isas ably written as any of | surroundings. The subdued, well-bred man- | in.” ‘ understand. [t's only to wait a little longer. The road was ready, and they bore the the newspapers of that city, which is no | Breathe ro row to me Soon none were left but the brightest ners, the faint perfum ¢ refined faces, ai John Randall's roze once more. bi cl ered uw: ~ | wou man carefully to the cars, and laid Y 1 I will give none of mine a the faint perfumes, the refined f1 nd | John Randall's blood fr It | The broad chest heaved under the blue tar- | wounded ‘wonder, sunsidering Gualane aeent'peer riamar e Which glowed where mirth held sway, the rich dresses, were like @ stimulant to her. | was not for him, then, that all these prepara- | nel shirt. . = » | him down with his head in Polly's lap. He ts aregular contributor to its columns; and it | Love should light in an tustant, ‘ She ueeded such quickening to be fully herself. | tions were made. Georgy had never spoken | ‘(Only to wait! Haven't I waited, Polly? | Spoke no more, and when thetown was reached, | has» Clreulation 80 extensive a: to make it very | As quickly decline. And the dimmest, ever burning, Her composed. delicate beauty unfolded to per- | Kaliburton’s name to him before. He could | waited patient? Isa man’s love nothing, that | and they came to relieve her of her burden, | protable propert J His blushes, bis sighs, Where the dead and the dying lay. fection in this atmosphere. she was embarrassed, as she did so. it must be set aside for # drunken brute of 4 | they found only a lifeless lump of clay. ™ ada ates to. Victor Hugo, and, not tind. | Are bewtidering things | Bhe had been talking to one and another, # you to dress, John,)” she added co father, who’s so blind with drink half his time | “So Polly has found her work. The old lady is ing bim at his residence in the line Deluc, drove Then away with his fetters, 1 was given a power of vision taking in shapes and trimmings with her quick ing! “I have laid everything cat for you, that he can't tell the difference between you | reconciled, because a child in the house ‘makes to the office of the Rappe!, where, I was told. 1 And give me his wings. | Miedendon. To see through roof and wall, | artist’ ed pad 8 peels wes janet ene | gomedia rag he pore have kerned and black Hannah’ and the little house all | it 0 cheeriul,” and Polly is happy, because her | Vouid be certain to mont bla ie Rappel occu ae ae upon the or new curtains, when & | upon her, bat felt so brol b e 0 as become a reality. He lo | sy _ be weber rg vice aaid nest ber: Changes it leting bie pane; Saeed ee |. leks eee, Denain; ‘ad a. promos toa gees little new mother with all his strong vene. | Ble# most elegant wh gt Bo STIRRING 1s Panis.— According to the eor~ apartmen' | ng ng vehe- >, 4 *< | seem not to be able to recall you atall, paicty, her indifference. her secrecies—all that | mise; and I have promised mother to let nothing | ment nature, and she is teaching hi be They Ugding on the Boulevard Montmartre. | respondence of the Pall Mall Gazette, molam- 1 4 ‘bol: ofthe int of suffering in | Mr. Randall. Yet I most have known you be- come between me and father as as he | very kind sanctum is a splendid roomon choly tales are told amon ng And the night was growing late. ies) ** iy mother has Juct told me | tad. ade him so miserable through this long | come between me and father a ‘you Henmin: | Yety kind to the the sgcond Soor, with large windows, and a | Paris. A journal not interested in. making out ‘The hour for repose | Your name, and T have come to feclaim ac- | He went to dress as she asked him. When he | now at the last minute, and we can’t be mar- , and your father worked Fallrosd Cor | oss Geugbtful view of one of the finest por- | a sod to Cepheid name twenty masters Had come for those whose pillows quaintance, if you will returned to the parlor, Stephen Haliburton and | ried just now.” daily 7 tons who now Were not beret by woes. | Lremember you bread. his wife sat upon the sofa side by side. Itwas | | He turned flercely upon the spare little figure | +: Was he one of the hands?" asks Den: ace fectly, ‘gy returned, quietly. who used to employ 500 workmen. Fale a aeae ushered in by a young page, I saw can bardly find work for fifty. [tis notoniy the of . “ a pale, slender gentle: forty-five or fifty, trade im articles of luxury which is ina iaa- rare indeed to see Georgy’s fair illumi- | @t his side. ‘A woman is the coldest hearted | has a speaki uaintante with do: 3 I aaw that doves alighted grown up wi a left us, five years ago. nated. Her cheeks were glowing, her eyes were | creature on God's green earth’ If {bad every- | DAS speaking aeq riiagalowty od painfully {rom sofa on which guishing condiven, at that of the most ordina- On many a slumbering breast, “Five years? Ah true enough! Won't sparkling. thing in my hands—as you have now—not hea- Yes, my darling, one of the hands.""—Jnland ™ re 0” I asked. wo a ~e- Ly Paul . | take this chair? What a lovely lily! Why itis As for Haliburton, he was always the quiet | ven norearth could stop me. And here you Mowth'y. a Hugo" . Pur it. A —_ example, . etate, While hawks with beak and talon | not real?” tleman, with no sense of his being out of | stand—my God!" ti 1 am Hugo's son,” he replied. “My father numbers families are now living on their aay= Flew down upon the rest. | . “No; these wax flowers are very like nature, oy Jace, No apparent suspicion of what was Polly thought of the bright little home down | pone be here presently. Gan I do anything for ings A large number of workmen hareem = | though—almost a ism; don’t you think ing in the heart of his em loye. in the village; it would never be her's, and with | at grated, but still these who remain bohind are And I saw that the doves’ wings folded 0, Mr. Haliburtont”* % y Wher napa ittaie ae vaee Geordy ‘had ready! | the thought came a silent little ghost of a sigh; Pinta Forgotten ae = mer eget pat I - com Sars San eee 4 po continues = On couches fair and grand, ‘Why. yes. It mustbe quite difficult to make | yat nobody ate. | venturing yon the crear een oe oerem eines | 4 writer in the Prankrort Gazette (Germany) | Kind enough te fell me ther he hace eawas | SOFFepondent, each political party blames tin, thom. I'dare say they bring « quot rice.” inal rer, and they went | venturing upon the stormy sea of this man’s — = 7 ae mo that be had read som other tor this state of affairs; the Republicans But the hawks flew into the dwellings nade ner pine Ae pet mig Sel thee Sweat ine A ae was 0 ry love, that she did not blunder now. Laying one | ®8¥* in | = books, and 1 was proud to hear from him | affect to believe that Liberal measures and she Of the humbiest in the land. 7 a P 1 The following advertisement’appears every | that his her would be delighted to see mé frank Rition of the Kepublic would make through Georgy Randall's mind. She began to | Georgy disappeared for a moment, and, re- | slender hand upon his arm, she raised her pa- | now and then fn the Gorrierede Torino Poor fellow! He next told me aboat thing’ o like mage bev eh And the doves cooed ‘‘slamber swee' examine the gentleman before her with interest. | turning, approached her husband, glaucing | tient eyes to bis face. | ““Lessonsin German, English, and Hungarian | health. He has been an tne for : = ything ,o like @ marriage |, and the And thay cosed ‘rede care dopant Labitiend a wan of the Cand’ he near ot! | Pelakinted heseed ity Sunt Sree cmeine tas | Decne Yon Suow 1S 19 Mata for me ©6,) ivccermmdesteraion bs te Keaeen, | lee fee te ene ee ee cell, Econ’ aareek Ree ee ee - abit and a man of the wor! 'y force of cit- | brightened beyond its wont ashe caught her is?” | "164 Stadts Nuo: | days are numbered + Still, although at. amy . . . But the bawk sat still and buried cumstances. But nature intended him for a Long afterwards those words and that look | j B Still, igh a hoy King and court, state balls, and the blue Itve- Ite crooked claws in the heart, diligent, painstaking, persevering man of busi” | °%*'We meant to make xt all very formal, John baunved him, but he heeded neither then Poclroclees petits een: Meee | oe mp tapinghed Mekeions Sank er hake: ph eg pel epo AT ‘Till the face of the tortured sleeper gO ee et as you lt clones tn my Oes wage eee | Mhee fedteer ere’ oe Crushed is tm one Of his, | ase utterty forgetien, even in Hangerg. Ho | ime edie To do #0 in Paris is not only an | Vissee wil! have m cheffect’ Alltne peaplect Depicted pains and fears; Was because he had so much time, so mich | Stie paused and a sober pallor overspread her | | Its the last time, Polly; I've said it and 111 | bas grown very old, and ts m for a'single tranc. | “Lbeata with profound emotion tee packers: | {aanion are kenping quiet, andthe wuumber Uf And mothers felt for their children money, #0 much flattery. He was spoiled by | husband's face. | stand to it. I'll never ask you again, co help This * We ve 2e Saal ved as et sary one Te cabdanc Geeat om iy uelic | beggars in the streets * quite unusual rteeeapan pnts 7 his opportunities, yet he needed only the right |“ What was coming?” his eyes asked, with no | me God! Will you come?” | ets proud of hs poverty. eT | fund, er ete tiiasttioas meetin he tice arcs | BM. Taxmneeomllp received s casa th Pome Meaning and shedding tears, se to Geri him ks on bernie He | faith thatit was anything to lighten his secret eter ou vere can't!” eee an | ears poverty. its last representative since the death of hs ™imber or his admirers in Beemeon, aid whee Was thirty years old now—he was past the age den. en good-bye; a promise is a p . “ ‘ ger brothe > t mo cl h donors for their pres ad: Pina ealecommesiceens when a man isdeins to beled by a woman. Bat wear nervously folded and unfolded @ slip - on bitterly, ~ = and walked away, | ican, ei id py Asiana at home. ia ! qounaes, camer. 1b tas Suite, bat we obi king the don noe _ rs Peace = — ng ng whence it came Stephen Haliburton had never disdatned it. He | of paper which she held. without once looking back. lt i the ome 2 sre Fao Pragntcones ‘oreof the Hi "whe for th arte: that I was overthrown hy the I saw an angel through the stars had always been led by the keen-cyed, beak | «This is for you, John; she held it Without once looking back. And Polly look- | [rejected the offer, and never regret no more of ingot, Wee Sor three-quarters ti wate went Gauss Gorn Wits paced oF Saad. nosed woman in steel’ slik, who, as Geor, shyly wens tre “My anniversary git. I | ingafter Bim with her lips tothe hand he had hen, L wae hungry, and had no money 2 eee ae le will be eotathisbed ta ae ats = taiked with the heir, sat holding her wine-cup | have been working for Mr. Haliburton, too, held, knew that he was hers no longer. | 7 maa Rates nak a8 in the history of France — ictor 3 y xt mther, | guarantees for that 1 have the wis) of De Her glorious presence brightened up to the fire-light not far off. i Delos of the devignyl have monde forthe cal: |andall bie torgesg. ne erreney | nice Eh waeno stranger te Keaese, aaa | ae tee Eee ei ee erent, | Soestry and the wise de ee ae ‘The seas and all the land. peat net soomens te en Mes. FRamtatt's talk: | price of the designs 1 have mate for the cali- sar bay ai le burden of her life | Years ago, he had given me, in London, a srent | posts cod still better iecrnalnin. The enee ea present compose the great Kepudlican party.” She flew to earth and gave her sword fetara he was rather unreserved —gosmpping tieore anew. If her courage failed or her heart fait- | deal of valuable, information for my book. | with whom 1 was conversing told me ail avout Into the outstretched hand about his plans and his prospects. He said that | «« You never suspected it? {did not want yon tered, none knew—none, save God. Dennis | “Hungary in 1649 found him in a very | bis lamented brother, who. an ardent student, LADIES’ GOODs. he was glad to get hom meant to settle | to, till 1 knew whether I could succeed.” —~ dropped entirely out of her life; no widow was S™all room, in the fourth story of adingy, old | undoubtedly worked him-elf to death, writing | 2 <A. ‘Of one who stood blind-folded, down at Millville now; look after his factories, | — john Randall had no voice in which to word ever more desolate. She had had visions of a | | csp ply em orerepy te Gasy chair. por- | iu the daytime for Le Raypel, and translasing PRE®“S cernyns any woRstED Goons, With scales, as if to weigh, | and the igre and —_ nce some im- | his amazement or his gratitude for his restored little child, with Pennie’ hamleomne f500— she cs hte mat Reescesiens eng g Burne and Walter wept lynn nl CANVAS, SILKS, nd said, “Keep watch—in frenzy Provements. He wanted a better class of work— | faith, which though his wife did not suspect it, was very plain herself, poor Polly!—a little . * = pane bene AND ALL MATERIAL FOR RMBROIDERING wave sts pcos ‘antag. : more tasteful designs; he hadn't seen @ pretty | was by far his most precious ‘anniversaty gift. child who should sometime call her mother; but | Shocked. What a change theee swenty years withal saddening manner, when the door open print from the factory. Didn't Mrs. Randall | She went ou: “1 could always use my pencil that could never be. {-am not sure but this | Das Produced in his once handsome and inter- | ed.and Victor Hage Limself stepped tm, Tce | STAMPING pete eres : A ting face! His hair was entirely white, Bis | coguized him at once, althongh nearly thirty . ree with bim' nimbly, you know, -lohn. Andithadoccarred child of her dreams had been her sweetest | &! y , | Cogn! iL 614 9h street, —= boeareae ees i ee she agreed with him. It was a strange | to por 4 day why [ couldn't do something fancy, for it will neverdie to her though its ~~ iit heap! bg utter- —_ had passed since es ee him last. | ao Brasch Store. Se ee Cee basis for parlor goseip—otls, chemicals, designs | with it for profit. 1 spoke to Mr. Haliburton, grave is made in that shadowy ideal kingdom | |¥ immed: His form, onge erect and proud, | That was in 1815, when Pee eee | ae At last it came. The sleepers woke, for calicoes. He was surprised to find how | and he was so kind—you must thank him—he where sbe dwelt aforetime. De ralecd amealy Dent. | He almost groaned as | speech in the Chamber ee ao | 601 BARGAINS iN And some began to pray. much sho knew about it: and she—she was | took so much trouble with my crude attempts, ‘There was nothing but reality left, and the wae Gneply sebeed when 1 tattrant tim | — a St ae ee | + little surprised herself. The most delicate pink | he did so much to encourage me. Ana now L though she felt it more and more as the days | who twas afrers ieiintensh Puy age oh - ] car fn 4 was an as Later — erec Seg en, | ; Giving thanks for stores of plenty, Logan to Husk, her cheeks, the irises of her eyes | am fairly in the way of work, Lshall work bet- went on, she worked on faithtally.. When her | “2° a iz warmly | and hv eye still possoed that magnetic, won’ | JOB LOTS OF FANCY GOODS, ac. And short the prayers they said, grew into great black flakes, full of lustre. All | ter too, now that you know it. I want todesign father, miserly even in his cups, said to her in “Ob, yes; oh, yes, he said in German. “I preter inet 1 Jett handeo: me. 80 remarks): But a wild heart-rending cry arose At once, at Inst, she turned ® casual glance | for carpets by-and-by, as wells Jor prints; that | his thick, drunken voice, “No. tea, to-night, know yon now. Everybody forgets me, 10 one sttrattive Laule Plat ae when Vere | —- : without the window. pays 80 well—a percentage on the sale.”” Polly: we are poor, very poor. But I've saved | catts'uyon mer m0 one’ cares ane more tor one | attractive. ca of dine tht vend i ee Seren he Beeee, most dark, And I’ believe fis taleinge |f | ante Stopped short, suddenly conscious of how tour crackers for your supper. I'ma good ta- | Gallé UPOR me; no one cares any mc enews | bie eNO OE SE) on cor op wae Senwebn sen It came from thousands of voices; almost ‘dark. And I believe it is raining. 1 | much she was saying. ther to you, Polly,” she only put out a thin | my friends?” “<Whevever M. Hugo ssks anything of me 1 | LL: sramed“tcosen ener ane prayeat. “pyr merage J must go at once.” “Ihave a surprise, also, for you, Mr. an- hand—such' a thin hand! to take them, and @ ‘o this Lobjected. I asked him how he could | grant it at once, l would not dae etm ; , Ged Almighty,” they enid, She stepped towards the window. Great | sll,” added Stephen Haliburton, quietly. 1 | ‘thank you father,’ and no look of disgust on be forgotten when hisfrienda in Hungary want- | frhis pret esti ae . | Sol MARKET Srace. “We are starving—we and our children— splashing drops were falling upon the tlag- | hope it, too, will prove agreeable. ‘The wni- her face, though they smelled of tobacco and od he to ceter to his native cou: of, na take “E ta ‘add t sat Vietor House 4 | PLAIN ANI 2 We only ask for bread.”* stones. The dull November daylight was al- | versal testimony of the milf officials, as to your | ora! | again an active partin ite fairs.’ | anything wrongot thatking ewer SK*! | Jon Lor oF PLAIN AND most gone. eficiency and trustiness, make me feel that I Perhaps the old man thought the ravens fed ‘ossuth smiled very bitterly. pin Taco Sal cordial & the extreme. He SE COLLAR eae oie vie 1 awoke; but the dream and the vision Mr. Haliburton rose also. am not showing youa proper appreciation, and — hie dau, hter, for he made no effort to do so “Oh, 3,” he said. “return to Hungary dis- | infe di that Dick “a pave vapid you walk” he inquired. «Let us take | I desire to give vou a somewhat more responsi- | himself’ Ifcver, in an uncommon fit of gen. honored, with au oath of silegiance to the Lisne- | Luurmed me th him, in 1538, that intended | [| RATHER BELTS a: Bese And I hear the thousands of voices Fete litio aut attracted Mrs: Appleton, who. ake cry girs athens soemed to’ be open- | eens eroueee, home anything, be always | burgs who murdered my friend# and Kinsmen, to visit him at his retreat om the island. of | L . DAVIS". nb ; , who— ¥ - | asked for it again in the morning, and a ; " j ‘Gonttaus te plend and pray. most of the guests having gone—was devoting | ing a way toJoun Randall ont of all his trouble. | bimeute Polly was ‘used to it. “She had her welhers Deke kena «=e | Gece See, Semmes i 8) 2 te Rene OF Fal —-202- herself to Mrs. Haliburton. “Jam too happy, Mr. Haliburton, to talk | dinner and breakfast with an eccentric oid | Dethera Dea a 4 kam bee | 48 GOODS in newest sty ., , jim how he along. ness is to be found im the manners ot that -\ Stay to tea, Georgy.” she suggested. “John | much,” he said in his straightforward way. ‘I | lady who liked to ‘have her around. and paid pote were m: | | a "I ~~ rT y 7 a ey y y au y good chil- | prince of poets. He invitea me to dine with —— JOHN RANDALL'S TROUBLE. knows you are here “aves ee votter | bare been depressed lately—the sudden removal | er a small sum weekly, for the privilege. So | dren’ git my poor'wife alive yet. 1 would be | him that day at six. and would not hear of uy NEW Goons meoniv, — nota bu ng. of = ae — ecb ane om ‘ | head bse yo sais 's letters, = a happy, even in my old age and poverty. iat | excuse. I N EX i. a e stopped short. Two irs ran down er stockin, for about @ year, an en a Y . | AN ENGLISH STORY. ““ Lhave been asking Mrs. Randall to take a | hig cheeks. Stephen Haliburton alone per | change are. ing home, with the leaves | {ey are all dead, and I am very lonesome. | Ie aske:! me to look at the papers a moment, y 0 i sears : tosh JEW FLOWERS, Sa\ Uiikwed tania mc ae might: mother,” interposed Stephen | ceived what Georgy never suspected, that her | dropping etilly about her, just as they did on piace ae kiea iat ie auaceiae Tewould | prostaheet. I could not help watchingthies as | “N BOMB received thing Se ee ere : Haliburton." | grasped Johns hand’? “sand Jealous. He | that evening —how long ago! she found ner fe- | Borne better in Hungary. I have foo Kinstole, | Peeisence ome ee eee nim ae om - John Kandall nttered his refusal of his wife's poe ihy Zor ratid the, lady, with contracted | grasped John’s hand. | ther at home before her. He was trembling | anywhere but in the new world.” | it evidently did not please him. Seizing atead- | — request very decidedly, as it he felt the request PO*Tis and prolonged lip again. +I shall be | ~« My dear fellow, it's too bad! I feared it a | and whimpering, dropping weak tears over a | “Why. then, not goto America again; where | pencil, he hastily wrote some lines on the proot- JUST RECEIVED . was unreasonabic; and yet thero was an uiiers | SAPPY ‘ 7 | little once or twice, Of course I could not hint | weak and dying fire your naine is revered" I ventured te say. | sheet, and then whispered to his son. The latter 500 DOZEN TEN-TUCK SD SKIRTS, current of grieved impaticnce in his voice, and jp Atu,then the keen eye overlooked Georgy, as | it to Mrs. Randall. | when Tere tite Lolly; what makes you later | “«on,"'he replied, “I have often been sorely | made'a soothing remark to bis father, which et 80, CHEMISES AT SAME PRIOB. ‘a look of perplexity aud selfdissatisfeccon ie {ft ask if there were any Just cause why the | «What, John? What, Mr. Haliburton?” | when I want you,” tempted to go back’ to the United States, but | once removed ‘the trown from Victor Hugo's | deci-im "8. HELLER, 713 Martet Bence. Saranun, Mateetesd te oun rife rise trom aliburton carriage, the Haliburton ‘heir, | « Nothing, Georgy, that you will ever know.” | Polly Idid away her wraps quietly in her old- | there are two obstacles inthe way. Inthe tirst | fine brow = en = * he Dreakfast-tabie, and thereby sicuify mer {owl traverse the length of Millville to take | ‘They were alone toyethor, by-and by, wich | madishwsyn navies Kinane ‘questi the while. home this young person who had married one of aequiescence in his decision, before ke went ol! . the Haliburton employes, their new found happiness.” Perhaps Georgy | for his morning waik to the mill. as equally relieved that there was no more “Is anything the matter father | Place, it would cost more money than [have to | 1 asked him how he liked newspaper work’ E[SNDSOMEST ANP LARGEST assogt- I'm not well taken care of. . 1m cold ang | “Pare, and next, ] am almost sure, thatin my | He laughed, and said he was bardly able to | be t Q on pa | 2 at 2 —— A ae Her looks did gg 20723 stood unmoved, a little concerned as | need tor mystification. : | hungry. You're getting close, Polly, close | Eo'pear the sen eoyage to ont Ce Unable | givea competent opinion about it, ax he did #0 LADIES’ CLOAKS AND SUITS not express. a was a pretty {0 Vhether her last dress or bonnet should walk Whatever made you think of it, Georgy?” | when you won't get your old father 4 mouthful | “aii'this was very melancholy, and hastened | "Sou ust ask M. de Girardin about it,” he | in the City. woman very prett light, very tain, rfide, not at all concerned as to her own dis- | ner husband asked, | of tea when you've plenty of money.’ to change the subject of our conversation, | said, good-naturediy. ““Hecan tell you all about | FRESOH CORSETS AT REDUCED Pax with targe, clear. steady fpr wrne . | 1 Why, John, it was that day about the lly put her shawl on again. , | I showed him the proot-sheets of the chapter | it. I‘never was much of a journalist. EST P KID GLO air. Beside ber | he hat's Cael: | amtatt eet eee ene Tinging, and Joho | giave vali the toll and L atithe inde: | you erent oon Foima: TL want you here; | on Andrasey inmy uew work on Austria. "He | ‘‘iYourwrite your eaitetnis tr nese,” aaid, | at $1 a Pair, cate graceful coreporens rather proulian: onal a Hage of bisemploret stopped at the dong, cag | mpowld have Becta kent Ceqld aeke ce ote | een fond oFirating me alone.” Polly put on his spectacles, and, holding the paper in | and 1 complimented him with unteigned simi: | _ BAIR SWITCHES aT $6, WORTH 912 " . ge of his employer stoppe oor, ence. I pondere ould make or save | patient aud long-suffering, put away her shawl, : an : ad aor Joice that suggested alto tute notes. For all his wife stepped from it. He did not however, | “methine meres HOt eee ve Und beokoulug toabey eke atoon onthe street | 18 trembling hand, read carefully what [ bad | ration upon the maguificent lineshe had recent- | _dvcl0 LER, 71 Market Space. this, she was simply the wife Of a master ma- overhear her say t Stephen Haliburton, sit | “ometbi = chinist in the great Haliburton Print Werks of atten. vind > : ! | pier than I ever thought 1 gould | outside sent for what she wanted, Then she | Witten. ly ad to the Count de Chambord you call to-morrow afternoon, { will suow you ” | | Meanwhile, [ had time to look around in the | “To my astonisbment, father and son lookeil at F. A. McCORMICI Me . | be again, dear. mended the fire and sat down to wait. | 3 st the all stoo arro A. » “s ™ Millville, and mistress in one of ‘the ‘small. | What 1 : | «Do you know I have fancied you were un- You've not been good to me Polly, this last | Prem bed On the walle hwne portraits ut he pa pene clon omy oO EO AVENUE (up stairs ap gpeoren nD mer Whos: long, orderly “ afternoon?” her bus | happy Ia John, because vou thought | was year: von’ve not been cheerful. I can’t beat a ini, Bixio, Kisz, aud strangely enough, Louis said, «blamed me for giving the poem to the ~¢ ikuted Millville proper. 9° | band sat at the tea- | longing for things ‘you could not give me: 1 | fong tace; vou ought to know it. Youdo know | NUL Dixio, Kisz, and strangely en My 'side T printer: ie was dimatished atoracr biog ie | A lerge and elegast assortment of ment, althongh bhe bad married inte it’ She Very pleasant,” she said thoughtful | could hardly wait for to-night to come, to tell it, don't you Polly?” notleed ‘Annee Terrible,” King- | It was not good enough. I gave it, without his | MPORTED BONNETS snd BOUND BATS, yalthough she had married t. Su ery pleasant,” she s: : ‘ally you all”? * Yes, father.” * © woll- 6 : i Next < 3 a had been brought up by a relative, upon whom ye was very polite in Mrs. flalibacton to | YA! darting.’ “ Tdon't feel right; I'm all ofa shake and a | Mke’s ‘oe eae teins | ee ‘with ines I him glad, Mi Amdcrecn, | Constantir os bend. . chobad been le t dependent, awl whom she Dring you home amedr | And he folded his arm about her, with his | quiver. Why dont you do someting” | toa of bread and a plate of dried meat tat sen ae ahh ces.” cial 0) ET ae Bee EES. &¢.. Giled by Mt = alled Aunt Apy ieton. + Yes, [ should have spoile dre: | face on her shoulder, he brightness “The ke i er, sent oe Ue oA 2 je etty. Rant Apolaton Kead at the other and Te wee Atoaie have spoiled my dress andat! | £40! OF her shoulder, and in the brightness and The kettle’s boiling father, and I have sen o my dismay I'tound that my ciencing | 7 , And thus we chatted on for over an boxr. | — silence of the room, with its arbor of tlowers fora loaf and some tea. You'll feel better 9 - is . es ded rs ae d get his wife to talk, und she seemed po- | ‘and glow of Ieaves, they felt their way through | when you Mies for cone tea Sen Nene Rid aintncnee Meerut Ottame pomeienet Nincuialeca ominieer ogy ior lg ah | 1 be | SO rly silent to-night, and absent as well as | the coming future. safe, confident, out of the | He did feel better: well enough to ley one "Yea," he anid, with a smile. “you sce for | the idiot ease em Stearn Sertmont of Bonnets aud & } Feach of any bitter trouble, since they loved | what was left of the loaf for his breakfast, and | yourself now that I aw very poor and yer, 1% oregon ks for | % yes were brighter, too, than common— | and trusted one another. seatter the fire, so that it would not bura’ the Vien | lett Hungary in Sse] Gavebenwed by | Aud then. with ene of thore caugtic remarks fo Poshin a little flushed. He was too generous, seeee — vest of the wood. e h bu ith haw- r } selfi-l @ man to begradge hereven hap- | 4 Grand-Duke’s Book ou America, ‘That'll be wood enough to get my break- #/lthe mean organs of the Hapsburge with Lav. in the eourse of the conversstion he asked elf at y's .. zg! teula I her abstraction flied hte With womciting | The St. Petersburg correspondent of the | fast. You're so extravagant Polly. Goto bed.” (ae enriched myself at my country’s expense. | me about my eyesight." He said be had read in her abstraction filled him with uneasiness. Baitic Gazette has seen advance-sheets of the He went to bed, but Polly sat on in the cold pleton—the west end—am the DiPoways, and the V« Perhaps, under the circu nees, Georgy might have leoked a little higher than John Randall. But then -Jokn was as good as gol, strong, steady, manly, true Autt Appleton had Lerception of her pretty protege erority to give her a liberal outtit yg the MH. so “., near Broadway. Paer- ettention paid to bridal apt monruing or- Do you know what my whole income was last somewhere that I had been in danger of losing | @¢t#. Also. dresamakine in sil it* Branches. owl ut Within « fraction of 500 livre!” (Less it entirely z= une The uneasiness was not «lecreased, when reach- volume of the Grand-duke Alexis’s account and darkness, thinking, long after her father JeS" 2 n ld,"hesaid,“when| J. B- YOUNG Bey vope passes ture, a complete wardrobe. a nice wedding ing hose a little before the usual hour. the foi- , . This tirst had drifted into the shadowy land of dreams. . ‘an $200). cdoctacs Sortahouee teveek, mua eate ot 9. . At had been very agreeable to Georgy to have | [owing afternoon, he met Stephen Halihecton pg he Horse eg nce pe lel cphwsrg eae. - | I shook my head sorrowfally. He told me the doctors forbade me to read, under pain of yolume is exclusively devoted to a description | When she had made the room neat next morn- what he thought abooat the chapter on Andras. becoming blind. Kighteen months I did not sy, gave me pienty of valuable and interesti ‘a boo! these things. Sue was fastidious to the core. just leaving the houss, nor when he found | °° e ript ! , Y She enjoyed advantages of position—her good Georgy with the same brightened eyes and | giaie STand-duke’s adventures in the United | ing and prepared his breakfast, she went to call tes. The above-mentioned correspondent | her tather. Hel ig and cates ht fel einer reigg imo No k nor write a line; bat when my cxes| : f eas follows ah , er father. He lay with one hand under his | information on the subject, and then dismissed ‘til not get any better, I. pursued the opposite | clothes, her prestige among the wives of the heightened color as the night before. ites as follows tit: lel - en GP dditle at hi r Sane ¢, , ni 3 other omcialsin the print works, Shewas far “that was the beginning ot John Tandall’s | “iige 8s follows about | gheek and the bed clothes huddled about his me, saying that it was time for one of his pupils | course. ‘Then I did get better. For once the | : is certainly a very, curious work. To | head staring with wide open cyes at the ceiling, is appearance. ‘loctors ” ee Udious—perhaps a little too iastidious for her trouble. ; judge from what 1 have read of it—whether his | stone dead.» Gold and dead.” It was a great | °° make bisappearance. __ gegen le poe “7 pins place. It was not so much common jeatousy—a | imperial highness wrote it himself, or whether | -hock to Polly. He had never loved her, but Going te See the Midnight Sun. noes eae pees aia Lin mag fee John Randall liad reached his Inst button—a ' man’ instinct of revolt at another man’s ad | gn abler pen did it for him—the book is in | she had given up mach for him, and ail through it isa good lands that “Lacd ot tee afianight | Hetook both ‘my hands. Hiontine It imparts 8 somewhat shiny button on a somewhatshavby miration of his handsome wife, as it was at, | tensely interesting. The grand-duke says that . came and @ good * 4 \e coat.” He had neither time nor pretext for ila- | adesperate death like fear tha Georgy needed | his reception mn wy “f Perit ving dle Pighenyelpesnginry saute ol — = ” . said, warmly to me. A his réception in New York almost stupetied | he sat by the little table Sun’—and [ am going to try to lead you into it. | = gering. Atthis moment his wife raised her somewhat he could not give her to make her | him. tp to ‘the went in the next room she sat by most stay all evening. and you last moment he had not | y like death almost, © @ fine summer's day I left Stockholm, | 5 See eer happy. He could never give her luxuries. He | thought that so brilliant an ovation would be this life singe ‘Depaly eft but she was thankful | which, by the way, is one of the most delightiul |, At the appointed hour I was at hishouse. He ie BY note”? she asked, im her own eweet could never say such things as he fancied Ste- | tendered in republican America to the son of s | : janiely Baltimore, f ook me to his dining-room. No one was there | _eultiy__ Baltimore, Maryland. _ : uow, that she had not left her father. Poor fa- | and interesting cities in Europe. Toward mid- - Md phtrany wd a % voice. phn, Hadiburion mast beavte to say to women. | monarch, He was very weak when he landod ther! wonave. a part of his support for suoticr | ay we came tom pace where we going toger 'uche and I. Sully there were six caaire ve- | ST pot Fae cont fo an account bout Teote aig But he loved her so! 0, heavens. he loved her | {n'New York, and during his progress up Broad- | tine, sod'ce neat neath ont heseoae, Poke diumer. Loame te a large hall, in the widetrof ee ee ere. | he ay | > oe an account—to an account about money (and so! How could he endure that anything should | way frequently felt like fainting. But overybod: poor! And Polly pitying him in his loneliness which wasatable,on which wasa very white J = — emory | 27 yaad "5 i of course it was money Georgy wanted) by & Come between them? : this manner the great poet honors the ‘GIN Kb street, between ! 80 kit that hi to look pleas: r et him, although table cloth. The meat and vegetables were | sie ‘at's Skan- Roman, and that woman lis wife. Jobn’s | “+1 won't wrong her and tease ber with sus-| aehewasin bit heart of heeria. Bisel eee he | auc boverty almost came to love B" | cooked, and Lsat down expecting one of the | of bis departed dear ones—Goblachmid's Stan ring Your articles scbns to get thos beck tn haat face flushed a litt hot retort pricked the picions,” he said to himself, in the depth of the saye, in his opinion, is the finest thoroughfare “ But he did not know,” she said stifling the servants to ask me what I was g»ing to eat, | ‘*Since this article was in type intelli- pais = very tip of his tongue, but he did notutter it. mght. «rn keep on steady. Perhaps she'll see | in the world. because everything there, houses, ‘ Id know. when, to my astonishmont, every man com- He was a patient man, naturally; and then he | jt Fight by-and-by.” repreachful thought, ‘no man cou | & FISHES, FIRST CLASS BER, shops, and the people, look not monotonous, ‘o they buried her dead out of her sight, and — menced to help himeelf. I ate also, and when { | Senee of his death has been received. rene. strects 9 ott had that deep. pure love forhis wife which over | Poor fellow he did not realize how his deter- | but gay, lively, and bright, What amused him wr sirprise came to her. She wae an ‘eir- | had finished the moai I expected to Ve asked tor sua aca ..| TIES : reached al! slight shocks. mination implied the dreary thought that her | perhaps more than anything elec was that the cas. Houses and lands were hers, but she was | money. Nothing of the kind. When we had ——- ne eg ee pace. | Lager reves: cleaned without takine them apart .“* [have exceeced my salary every month heart was turned from him. He raised himselt | bands, upon catching sight of him, struck up, justasfar from happinesss as when Dennis done we went to the counter, our word was on engl ng eg) in pee Mk 2 eo bay eed clothes cleaned + Be or Sere maried. Georgy,” he said. “The | on bis arms to look on her as she slept; and al! | not the Russian anthem, but the so-called | turned his stetwars tack upon her and sail | tasted, we paid the cost (twenty-five cents) | thinning out of the wild ducks on the Chiess- Seer SRO nO ne RD, COEING first of January will be here in a few weeks, through what followed he retained the pure, | “Dirge of St. Catherine,” which is played in good-bye. | and then left. While I was in = i oak e Gives some hints for the preservation of | Kid Gloves clesmed on short notice. Price mot —t mae not be — = meet all hers ly map ere calm face, as it pressed hrm agi lo ont Russia only at the funera's of a momner of the «+ Men are curions animals," said the eccen- pene i pg ene eg gles j - pune. 5 Trinny awe coat Seaeee orate. punctnality guaranteed. ‘eon! Bway a penny of money. 1 don't believe sou the Moonlight that glinted the frost om the | imperial family! The cheers of the people were | tric old lady aforementioned, “aud there's. no a prose t been ra, | = saree s penny of money. 1 doa’t belleve you window-panes and ‘tdoded the room. = ine than any hehad Noam in eo. understanding them: but my dear, if were in | and received me in the most charming and | markably successful for the duckers, many 0 jo, either.”* or DEY GOODS. 85 GOODS He asked me to spend the | whom make the better part of their It is | your-piace; all the seomay te the world weulia's | Sevoeunie manner, palace, a few miles hooting ducks on the Susquehanna flat very prevalent in the | hire me to take a particle of interest in one of next day at his She seemed colder to him after this, aud he | rope, trom which he playfally concludes thi ** J shall say no more abont it,’ sheretarned. kept sient. | lung-diseases cannot be S| q sportsmen <T ought to wear 4 new par of gtoves to call on je knew that she met Haliburton at her | New Wor! sto the soktiery,the variety of | them. That's my notion. But you're one of | ‘rom Stockholuw, and, of course, I gladly ac- wpe areas question among spo t : flats is driving the Paul's bride, but if vou can't give them to me he knew that when she went to the sea- | aniforms struc avoxtremely odd. He says | the forgiving kind (which 1 must confess I'm | cepted the invitation. When I went there {saw | the slnk-box gunning on the fats is driving the i must do withou* them. side the ensuing summer, for a week's visit to | he saw, peacefully, side by side, helmeted | not,) and {dare say you want to be servi a nioarent /S6 antes se eaneciey SA |: Onna Sway Soak Cee nena Lorene AS john Kendall's brain was fine enough to u- Mrs. Paul Appleton, tore he was also. He | Prussians and ‘kepied” Frenchmen, red-coat- | somebody. Doas you please. Hant up this | when I wir iad Mar Lake hictacranan, | Seackor uamaenionn teak at ten meen Ot derstand that t ot the acquiescence he knew that she seemed to be living a tite apart nglishmen and Irish troops bearing the | high-tempered laborer; and endow him with | King was, — a ieivin tea tevcemsl: | detbeeebian sieht tee Oueeebke center trion: | wantet. He w to indalge ber, but from him; and once—that was when the iron er of the Green Isle. | yourriches. You've had no advantages, poor | gaged in pain| = Wy aay Batoasieeneal i ec ovine ne ay 1 there was the fact that. if he begau it,he should entered his soul, when he went toher desk, a The grand-duke cannot praise too highly | child, and know no better. Lord! to think of | night sun,” and, y as % EDUCED PRICES, be always poor. ‘ had . present he had made her during bord ene i | American hotels. American faze, ens punks, | the years, that b re This was his fact. Georgy had hers also— ent—for a sheet of note paper, and found it | however, is too rich. ‘There is at their tables,’ | money pilling up all the time ~ Promhmiral e he didn't mind so much wearing key. she flushed and sar e would ge pa . L asked for the peculiar dishes of Ameri- esult but disap- 0 ‘y . Eelgioves ov this particular occasion; “that per for him. : 7 < Y putin the papers, with no revalt bi P* | ter astonishment found that the cows were fed breeding grounds. tleman of seventy-six, from Philadel. dreds or thousands which are killed on the scented, and Chas | On Weka whe. Denne Gu siat suinion | nop at mlanen, and tout tee heme | ca, and at the hotel they could not give me any. | etree | : which was wedging itseif painfally into ber con- Bat be kept true to the promise he made him- | Their cooks were Italian and French. The Mette indeed,” said Polly, and sighed. | on pend - tag toro ri ona ayer fn oe — . poe noe ap an stale, LACK A! COLORED e1.xs victions, was that she would have to give ap all self. He kept on “lighting his way ainstit as jandiord shrugged his shoulders when I asked | 4 He is married,” said the old lady, ‘‘and you | not only the — a og —— eyo ee ete oe ee eee the littlé luxuries and elegancies that she 80 pest he could,” hoping, with asi art, that | nim abont it. Out West, however, my desire | are m daughter.” | fod raw B. Pinally ‘reached Finland. | viich is perestantly disturbed and Killed on it ne earens ae craved, that her future was to be a plain mat- | she «might see Itright by-and-by. r| Was at once gratified. I dined one day on | “'So'the two established themselves together, | The Fins are exceedingly agreosble people. | feeding grounds, will, most, assuredly, desert ° fer-of fact routine sePhe Tele sortel moral | thane Months wore away. The second year of | baked pork-and-beans, a very palatable dish, | and lived another year. ‘Thon the old’ lady, the Soeert, a8: ight say, and there around | they will be less exposed to danger and stealy | FRENCH MERINOS, SMPRESS CLOTHS tions in w absence she felt a sorter moral their marriage was nearly completed. Jo: which would certainly bear trinsplanting to | looking at Polly's sad little face one day, said | the dese 8 you might say, and there sround | hey will be lesv exposed to danger and steady | : << It don't seem as if you ought to be tistp- | herself that there should be no outward and | «american manners, the grand duke thinks, | her, and her physician recommended Califor- | JOU jour body to that grave-yard to | numbers, the constant warfare kept up on them SYENING DRESS GOODS. Reenter a Se, Treen thc, No"aupiion a coms io any | casant onatenune of everybody's frankness. | Ma; So they started. ti at | bet Puried there. "I found the clergy well ct | wili tend to induce them to seck new and safer | hom go. "We. acd to talk tant the secuad yoar ef mi lite n leasant on account of everybody's frankness. Wh momentarily ex, ing & gres ted ceed! % rt places in their periodical 2 “ ree ee cilten. ‘We used to talk al that the second year of marriage life had been | fie tells a number of Curious anecdotes on his | eo bene ae omentar y expect ngs great ied there. I found the clergy well edu: | will tend to induce £2 ee ing something every year, so that I miz t better | less os than the first. Nor had he ever experiences with the aborigines. In Washing- some future time, when we sit thinking of the Then I went on, following the ‘‘midnight sux’ | pilgrimages north and south. The theory of the u =I I m the more plausible, and the myself one of these days, I don’t Like to deny | omitte TO give her any little indulgence within ton he was told that the Irish servant-girls at | most trivial of common-place things, it comes, pa sates tog! a as ceawaees | gence = By thcecoedl ng ge weal + yea." | bis power. He had prepared ® surprise for her | the residence of M. Catacazy wore dying to.see | and taking us unawares, it prostrates us. Peaster jentaen, Shei neal Goat eat” | Gok care aso enema ¥ INE MOURNING GOODA PS ncendimnepe Mannlymonningin | Garing the gee ny OF MSF wedding, | him. He put ons cap and an old traveling | “'So with Polly. Sitting im the care, wonder- ght sun and that Polar sea mall its stillness | ““The arrangement, entered into by the Havre She was one of those women who say too little | during the year. 5 1 cout, and went unheraldeddown intothe kitch- | ing idly whether the wind is east or west, the po ee de Grace duckers to shoot every other day, and rather than too mach. The anniversary fell upon Sunday; and so | en among them. He was not recognized by the | :ngine’shricka and stops, and there ia great EE | which has been embodied into a law regulating | over kept in this market. All marked down at a eee wees oe se tc cieurtne tates. Goncgy | samme tas meceiing evcuten, “We elation hed | eetiee, Sed cnet with fhe ie Halt ae | commeotion. A Game for a Winter's Evening. | ihe duck shooting on the flats, is intended as a of-all-work, ca: ple. Gi 3 . “Whatis the matter??’ the old lady ask: erhaps it is not exactly a game, but it might | the birds a short | very low price, in onder to reduce our Stock pre- <iusted the parlor, and made the pudding, fed been made to any celebration by eitherof them; | ay idea ot where Russia was situated, and one | while Polly looks up idly, scarcely iaterested Pi sere pnts vn aes fon knew waar es | Protection, whi a pres depen ped oe - the canary, and ihen placed the sowing ma- | but Jobn felt sure, some way, that she could | of the girloven asked himit the czar always | “hile Folly looks up diy. scarcely Taterostod. Gaile cliher, unleesit be asJourney by the | ‘CtPite from danger, it fs hoped they w coca! wtesn to Dink Se ra ghine inthe window, facing the dull leaden | not let the time pass without somesign. For bis | wore crown on his head, adding that she | ‘+X hand-carom the track—a man killed, { Fireside,” or it may be th raged light of November day, and sat down to stitch | own part, be had balf resol Nalbe ere noe on Home Eneyclope- | ‘countices myriads asin for- | ied more than | expienation of their ae emt tran? | knew the Queenof England alwayadid. Equally | think they say. One of the hands.” Fireside,” ot it may be the “Home Encyclope- | rounds in the same myriad: ss She b: married mor explat of yen ‘and was making her first shirt for John. | he thought, wouldgbe better than this chilling Gusahas Mebraskte hase a tucuter’ or tee petier than thiecchiingg | musing 1s the account of his’ reception at | "'A'tittle paler, Polly looked outor the window. | ‘1i8;”, ‘The iden te this: Some one selects an ov. | ihe dats end take up thelr course for regions | Que price oaiy tm plain figures. Wo deviation Ste wae very thaughttal, a dogged pain on ber | reserve. With his ‘mind divided between the | Pegisiature Gengraitiatet nim on the 4a ‘They were carry’ 9 ing & man past, and— Other, Take, for illustration, the first thing ; SUS SS ONS wher a ouch: | j ‘The old lady was horritied am instant later, fore mé—my lamp. See what alot of ques | mg indicate =a —— ‘old | slowed face all the while. anticipation of retiet and jealous droad, he Anigod ot his father i war with France! Another | sor Polly Hove Pobmd her seat, and foliowed the —- ee pore this, "What inthe lamp | Suementy.. er Greseiommnmete a4 getting too | Ww. M. SHUSTER & BRO., Perhaps I shall stay at Aunt A gn's to | to the counting-house that Satarday ni legisintor of that state wantea to kuow if it was |r oly flew. y come out of this What is the temp | haunts on the Su a fia 5 ae asianauae tes,” she said to her husband at¥ the dinner- | receive his money. The Ss se: always cold in Russia. : SO teeie Dennie!"* a *, ein = Scten chace es een | war! vas- back. —- 2 . Pon ania eveune. Se et 0 Se Ne Came See ane, ONS) Wien SEC my Gancmeicden res waeeasnieee maby aan: Sati howerer, | ‘Then a faint volee came from the stricken | Whateolor! Does it melt ‘easily or ots, What tH ~ rity on ail say | )WENTY PER CENT. OFF Sa avert te be sure! And b: deration with which oe Kind | form. is it used for besides to make brass? So the same | with sporting, suggests | Pagina ie ted a moment. have left in mybands? To a ¥ | ness and consideration os of : #80 ue me that the % ern last night, Georgy, that L should | the way, Mr. Haliburton spoke to ms to men { oficers were treated by the grand dui Tr iy Put me down. ‘of questions abou cop) ‘should ‘consec' x on i nar beter ys lena birds four WINTE ¥ GOoDs. fi home an hour or two this even- | tion to you that there were to be some changes | (en. Custef and hisgubordinate the gran: te They laid him oe peyton ferent | ‘The base of the lamp has sve soe Soe place of al i Seeving the birds moe dare WHERE THE HAZEED Pai0D IS OVER 1, ere rN i a.mectinged Gn ests of tee | Cuan dee oak et there he is himwelt "iF" | has wordsof the warmest gratitude, Gon. GE grass, and Polly knit by. bls de. he make it Neary, anda whole 1 re can be fiat dn whic ced isd recs ° a mili a feeling a 's photogr: : i . £ earned chim: abot henever they attemp 7h peng a ee fir heer een ionlig mest his employer. It had gone srhig ip eet eumptuonsl Vrinted ‘and pro: | uc Tve longed so for you Dennis! and you—you | \Sege‘are place, amd probably but very few can | (rent Tis pian soeme to be, sn morons” | ow aut aitee UF WINTEE OB WOOLRE wee had forgotten,” she. said, quietly, so | tarfagh him lke a thunderbolt; as the cashier dred copies | '';34,not forgotten pe ea acopted ‘duckers. ‘The ALL 8 ie it of you ‘k—that is, of course, ng b displaced. Stephen ore YRotten? hardly. I've thought ‘The wic! ; et quietly seat be thought she o54 | a pp ees ohn faced him, SE aE re heal ot | te ‘ven wo! the saints in heaven, May l be | cotton? what part of the meet 'n its present mate Sora tow — more, Also, 20 per 4 toiarranae bar sict for the eal. Sve pot oat | Pil nt detalyou mow, ake. Randall. sha beet wen the tions panel teem cemtvs ice | _ Yess SLOT soy Denste mow Ergic: the worm of © cylinder? ‘Then the | ‘newume killed wil wot jeeey wecceestally. It ee eS ee ee, teres {o jet you know of the changos | ort wasauccoeded by an over-civilized ideal, | when,we can do", 71° Gor tinder nan | hallow, tm the form of 8 cylinder! ere iss the gunning days were reduced to two days in ike wg SE ave, a | ATA RRTMET TSE UN uy | Mtg I Senge ANAL Rg SRE | God hn, wh wae aontnen;” ne | SPAT nae nm temagel ere | ts ek, snattes Oa eronng Sep S| satan haat as she approached ber aunt's gate, old | With the money i bis norveless hands, John | ning breeding ona eset both, cheated | ~2id lowly and | bear cing soon,” | OF DEERE boys and girls prosernly f aictions- riderable protection Maw tuere ls the | REDUCTION EXTRAORDINARY Mes, Halbereika: was being, nended from | He was ts wes Bis lace, /For what reason io | the fox-hound, lion and fawn ia one, Jost athe | rh heealking ite hie wite Rout Niociors, Fee and otber books Deforopome of the questions | st thing to'no pretection sek steel- ‘oe ble But to lose | might create no! uman His wite! , Be wary iaSeegees of the mill in which Joun | {twas to toss foputation, Soerags eve balf'an mach trouble “about politics (in the | Bin wee aula vtt's his sister, lot — it, wer ‘Randal ‘ed. Stephen, the only | Hehad never imagined’ such on hea just sonbeee from mae years resi- | that. The money that he dence abroad. These two facts caused Georgy | not dare to maki \ears: come away,” and they left then @S0y ike and hammer 4 tem on gee mended the broken’ the seruti mother mewha | He might bave track, with the kindly sunshine all about them, Spores rw tn Geephen Halivarvon | Itsught be heeded for thets bares Stari sound. atthe dene ld agin nos his bat to her. needs, before he their talk, these two said their pretty face,” , carelessly, to | like death struck In his soul. bis peepee — ainndner! “ ane noeeet we Georgy evidently had not overlooked the re- | see the “<T'd like you &nown or shook know.” currence of their wedding da: 4 will ge home to Old Mrs. Haliburton with her keen eyes and | rooms of the piace for my = — ane aa a and Vaihe, and peeple—aae and scarlet gera- my Plenty of money gon reais mars nowt eubet | Bb came othe dom taal oat, Sait tas ” one 4 OGceny teond baal Appleton and his bride | of velvet collar, Ter place, borne, all the sorrow ‘and NS pe 5 nd teemucaenatees fis too’ band band’s love. ‘ber = — 3 Fear before “were quite tiled with guests, A | witha witd heart-bound he kissed it, as aod e L aon*t Ah it = ive dainty and bride was the new | not for a year before. She was her money—if she