Evening Star Newspaper, May 25, 1878, Page 3

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THE NEWEST THPORY OF COURT- | an old sailor; the rest remained on board in | chamoisieather round her neck, and put | “ Why, Miss—Miss What'sher-name, your The fkussian Police System. | GOOD NIGHT. DRY GOODS. SHIP. the mist, and a dark line was taking shape and | them on outside of her Scotch tweed. companion.” The formidable system which, attaining its | rising before us, while the rain was slapping | Misanthrope was our host? He knew how | — "She has become my companion, madame,” | nighest point under the Sa Tule of the | 80d keep you safe, my little love, mn round us in wet sheets, As the boats were | to assume other roles: with a few light sen- | said Mr. Bassett, wit Hl through the night; EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS. a bow, shutting the | Czar Nicholas, is now beginni deca: s ‘Ow! Gepreasea - beached, we saw long flelds of brown, slippery | tences he had set us ail at our ease at once, | coach door, “Bon voyage,> The whips | mithtssem te have woplded. tiselt in ine gany | Rest close im his encircling arms mercial cltcies we tare been ake ears incom. sea-weed through which we were to wade tothe | and he sparkled with jestand brilliant speech, | cracked, the horses plunged and were off. As | most famous members. Count Schouvaloff | My heart is with yon as I kneel to pray, Tare bargains in the best makes and latest styles of old Sea-House—a strange mansion built of the drawing also from each some fit return, till | we looked back and saw the husband and wife | and Gen. Trepoff, the former representing its | Good mght! God keep you in bis care alway, coe and Domesiic Fang and S apie DRY broken stone of the beach, looking half of a | we forgot the raging tempest withoutand that | standing side by side in the sunshine, those | Subtie finesse, the latter its merciless rigor, | Sods. which we now offer to our and prison and half a mad-house, falling to decay, | we were strangers Within. Nor was he, as he | not in the secret were speechless with amaze- | So little, however, of the popular idea of ic is | TM!CK Shadows creep like silent ghosts Drege and Strangers at a slightadvanee on cost ¢ turtle doves, as well as it could be seen throuzh the | sat at the table after all the exertions of the | ment ai the reveration that began to break | due to actual knowledge, and so much to the | 1 jose PR gems tae Wamcutta 4-4 #icached Ct a8 a storm. . es day, almost every moment of the latter part upon them. ively imagination of foreign novelists, that, y* While wwenaa Lonestaie: hy Sgn, m9 5 ‘ “And so it is,” said the captain, who had | of which had been spent in making arrange- "DT understand you that those two peo- | were any one to describe it as it reall js, he meso, } ned es. astus sald, gone ashore with us, and supported me. “The | ments for our com! 200-, . ort, the shaggy and un. | ple— began Col. Ba ST ACR ry le cy rte would probably be scouted as wholly ‘un- | The moon comes stealing through the window 2c. :) Lyon Gros Grain Blac! master of the house is a strange creature, | kempt fellow who came out to give us shelter; * Are married!” cried B-lfe. “Didn't I tell | worthy of belief, Thou sands of readers still SS8.00 per yard: a heantifal quality of @9- : bars, speaking to few but his servants—mad, may- , dark and black-browed still he was, but a | you that this house is as full of romantic sur- ut implicit faith inthe magnificent canard | A Silver sickle gleaming ‘mid the stars, ide at 95c.. “recen: 1,25; Lovely Freach | be, or has been mad. He married a girl, they | gentleman jusg’au bout des ongies, a gentle- | prisesas the castle in the Pyrenees? Mar- Tiecated by Alexander Damas, pere, of &! Ford, though Iam f. ' pedis i Beanie Brtated Union Linen | Say, who had another lover, but whose mother | man with perhaps just a dash of the gypsy. | ried! And he has settled on her a hundred- | Russian who. when summoned by the Minister * en ethiaa: resent ptbownson’s, Perfect chen with # elied her, under bad threats. She never | As for Miss Murray, her color coming and go. | thousand cocoa-nut trees. | of Police, and po'itely motioned to & chair, | To trust yuh thee hon toy ea yet | loves, $1.25: best make Alneeey Ree eon Kid fwarthed with the | saw him till he came with the parson. She es. | ing cruelly, she lived through the dinner, |‘ Cocoa-nut trees!” cried Miss Marvin, with | tock in his confusion one beside it, which im *SThe night is long— | l Urgaudies la new Gesigus 1sse par iin caped from the house that night and drowned | playing with fork and spoon, bu no* tasting + her-uose iu the air. . | stantly sank wich him through the floor into | Lsay with sobbing Dreath the nd prayer, | yard. Call and examine. ee fs no herseif, they think. And the man came down | morsel. As we rose informally from the tale, “Cocoa-hut trees. Thatis a handred thou. | narrow cell, Where ie received twenty smart | Good night! Swee dreams? God kecp you every _my2t-tr BRODHEAD & 00..939 Pa. ave. here, bought this place, and perishes with re- | and were passing out, he came to her side. | sand great silver dollars a year—almost eqnal | Jashes from'a brawny sergeant of police, and where? _ Mu = MVE HUNDREI more, they say. But his house isalways open | 71 have sumeiing to say to yous? said he. | to your income, dear. I always Kuew she was | was then drawn up again. As he reappeared, lary R. Higham in Churchman. | AUVE HUNDRED (500) PIECES OF on the side of the sea,” said the captain, jerk. | But she turned, and caught my hand. a princess in disguise. AndTam to go down | the Minister observed, coolly: “I am very ——— Buntings. tmareen et eeag eng bE A ing out the sentences of his deep bass with the | ‘No, no, you can have nothing to say to and visitthem and majry a South sea island | sorry. my dear sir~but if you choose to Lake A Curio tifal ight spring shader cute abe toe pinned rain in his teeth. “He and his men tend out | me,” she gasped,and drew me swiftly away | Prince myself, if—if—no obs‘acle— a chair marked “20 lashes,” when your own | THE “BONNET SHOW” IN WESTERN MissovRt. WOOL, fn every color and shade; Lace Stripe Bunt- onall the wrecks, and there's many ofthem on | with her. By the way that John Cameron imprisoned | Was only 10,” it" ty ita e."* . . 1] (BRS. in black and colors: Biack @renadi this ugly bit of water. He thinks death by | John Cameron followed us, finding his mo- | thelittle hand, T imagined that hethat lie | Bat ered aa tne ee ae, Sunday gay ghe. day ofthe anngal ja and wool: Colored Grenadines — s pretty bad, I guess. There he | ther rested and refreshed and beginning to | proved his opportunity to make that very It | authentic feats of the secret police require no | mizit be termed a fie day for new Deunece, | Sei. Beas i si. == | exaggeration to setthem off. Toward the end | for the rain fell mildly in fitful gusts during the ; Black Silk. (eur like fine needles hori | rectly added herself to the party. | | of the last rel; a nati fiicial of high rang, for the rain fell mildly : gusts ¢ ng the . (Guin % so queer, Inherited Tricks. | en, @ native offic gh ru a day, and the winds Were «quite raw for gauzy | Wearing sit tu the | | drowning comes now. fidget, and as Lucia came fitting in, Belledi- an obstacle. The rain was drivi ily in our faces, and the wind was all we “Did you ever know anytl zon fon. ‘he .) at SL. ree 1.35. We How often has thy 1 3 L } having questioned their reputed skill Tusiins and spring millinery. But it was “bon. ng a rea! satin finish Biack Blk, (Gulnet pone evuld make way against. The captain had Mrs. | cried Lucia, “as his putting Miss Murray at he inheritance of tricks of habit is oneof | tracking down any one on whose trail they | WUSlins and spring . . 7 make.) at $1.25. This Black Silk L ac Trearest, how canst thou thus harrow Howison on one sideand me on the other ; Miss | the head of the table? And he treats her a8 tne most perplexing of all the phenomena of | Might be set, was challenged by the Minister | Net day" in Bot Att the rewtons adjacene to | BANGAIN day we pall from D0 to 100 yard, | Muriay was close behind, and the struggling | if she were reaily—really— Oh, beg pardon, heredity, The lesssirikingthehabit the more | of Police to test ft/in hisowa person. Ac. PEARL and cite of all, the regions adtis Cotored Sitks, in GARTERS. Market Space. Minded parent put ! uf M remarkable, perhaps, is its persistence as an | cordingly, the Russian it the capital, and re- v ‘4 s uM, steel Color, logy Far luieed from a jest tee wind blew down their throats, Bell» every | | But Miss Murray did not vouchsafe her @ inherited tralt. Giroude Buzareingues saves | turning toi a month later with the utmost se. | Ped,to s range Custer: but it ivone that ts { Rat shades or aii ge eereeey ae, fe... Methinks | now and again sitting down on ‘the wet sea- | glance, moving in pie tie rood boing it, tat he Knewa man who, when he lay on Ins | crecy, ina seemingly impenetrable disguise, annually adhered to by the Clay county people , 1! “Averys light ‘si ‘We have recetvel nes foot, werd, telling everybody to goon and let her | iug my hand. closing the door aw ' a ting it back, was wont to throw his right leg across | took up his quartersat an obscure tavern in | with the strictest punetualit It originated in | PUM@red (100) pieces of Silks, bought at the very | diethere, but presently making her mind to Te eed eee ogee | the left; one of this person's daughters. had | the poorest part of the city; but he had hardly | Preug Detween the two Baprist congregations | West cash price and we are selling them at r the storm again: and we had another | sleep a Kin this se cd oueht. She | the same habit from her birth, constantly as- | been there an hour when'he was astonished | of Big Shoal Creek ‘and Little Shoal Creek smallest advance cost. Bnree hs ng field of the ankle-deep sea weed to cross | dropped my hand and wal ‘i ng the eek suming that position in the cradle, notwith- | by the arrival ofa courier with a card from the | meeting houses... This rivairy was established sol Cassimeres and Linens for erp tters, he Comes: veried the captain | where she Stood silently a minute, then sab standing the resistanee offered by the swad- | Minister, inviting him to dinner that even- | years ago and has been kept uy oven alae 25 'to $1.50. Lace for curtainer How ‘are you, Mr. Basset'?_ Any -helter for | down Lesideits oy vou are | sling bands. Darwin mentions another ease ing. wih varied results, sometimes the Little Shoal | Corsets, 60; four (4) pair teal Engiieh Stow, ere rare ern eae ners Bt Sea Houses We | ind, "vou can help wer must get away | 1p his ariation of Animals ana Plants a ene riko Crimean cee azaln, when the Creekers getting off with the best bonnets, and assortment of Colored Stockings tor chil: a A ¢ , . a e. . ler Domestication. el ha e 0 s | 5 Eng. ea g Shoal Creekers car- | @26n’s Wear; very large size And to make matters worse, at the moment, | from here now from these people. T must £9. | habit of setting its fingers in rapid qmotion | lish manufacturer residing in St. Petersburg | eats Next year the Bie Shoal Creekers car: | white, "GLE: excellent aaa ang ed eee as if nature -at last gave way, Miss Murray tell | where I eanno| i now le has found | Whenever it was particularly pleased with any. | asked a number of his countrymen to supper, | [ished 1s as follows: On the first Satu and | Quis’ gor led Bed Ticking. 25; white Honeycomb over and fainted. ne, ie will be always finding me. Wait?’ she | thing. When greatly excited, the same child | drank sir Charles Napler’s health, and sang a | Sunday in May the Baptist conaresa toon | Sere Meme aTMOM, BB inch, 94 neh and Bs ‘ sail, holding her throat as ifthe words choked | Would raise the hand on both sides as high as | thoroughly “John Bull” song of his own com. | Little Shoal Creek, inlay county. have a | MISE CARTIER S77 Market See Ee ae eee eeee Ont ao Hye Wack mever | the eyes, with the fingorsin rapid motion as | position, reflecting upon the eflictency of the | “Bonnet Show. This sa penieat whan the | et = at Meche Rous. <8 storm to be of service; but he lifted her and ee ns hoe fon 4 aye you ia ngver | before. ‘Even in old age he expe-iznced a | Kussian’navy and the courage of its officers, | ladies appear in the best bonnets their means | wu. OPEN ON MONDAY PS THOMPSON carried her across his shoulder as though she | dream. but— at as us ree sent look | difficulty In refraining trom these gestures, | in terms that would have driven Admiral | and the Kansas City milliners can produce. : Ree eee ee a a ey oor We wae tn ronan hare had. boon do: He had eight children, one of whom, a little | Popoff frantic. The next morning, to his un. | The young men eome there, of courserand iol MAY 13, 1878, gates. He was a ‘ low in Fe a SrOt a Ane irl, when 4 years of age, used to set her unded amazement—for not asingle stranger W Cu ads ing gentleme! SF la Pacnateee, LGGUELE Ta ake | marty me to the cerion whom nay sreprether fingers koing, and toluteus her. hands after | had been, present the night before he Te: | ladies trom Ranene city’ and: atjoinig cities | 12. Nal sean, SPTIN DRESS GOODS, trom 12, e a Zes, . a bs s e manner of her father. still more re- | ceived asummons from the chief of ice, a ‘al exhibiti " mon nf ~ d before the compelling tempest | had defrauded. He was a peraon from the markable ease is described by Galton. A | Personal friend of his own, who, eying: him ee eee roreaog of bonnets in Clay all colors, 200, ! ns ; y ! entleman’s wife noticed that when he lay | With a significant smile, said: “Mr. A—,I | fisbonnet show" ° Back GRENADIN From Harper's for June.) | Ealefrom those directly behindthem, Bute | Every'day it was held ap before me that {lous trick of raising his right arm slowly in | Whom you may perhaps know something, has | aliover the adjacent country, fori CLOTH, for Boys’ Suits, 25¢, up, 7 Black ALPACA, I5c. and ap, All Wool Black ¢ ASHMERES, 650c, groups followed with shrieks and laughs that | Miss Murray; t didn’t see you.” Mr. Bassett, however, had caught her,-the | me, he will be al IN A STORM. | | gh Th glance ha A Love Story, by rriet Prescott | | my head again, and felt in the deep | south sea | | * front of his face, up to his forehead, and then | wiitten a song against our navy, and given | Creek has seldom b SUrpasse: i ' ven boWed his head to no Ddlast, and seemed a | Would be the cause of my mother's disgrace, OE his faces i hans we Baga u # | Creek has seldom been surpassed act Tain was drizzling out of a damp heaven | tiwer of strength before us there. Nor did he | of the disstace of her children, of her hus: @Tovping it Wiha jerk, so that the wrist fell | several copies of it to his friends. Now, I | at the annual bonnet show. L: | ard us ani | fower of stren a ere Lhe | of the face.-OF Ii heavily on the biidge of his nose. ‘The trick | need hardly tell you that this is a danger- | Cyer,was a bad day for nice, new spring bon. Breaking over us: the wind which had riser at | L00K over hisshoulder when, just at the gate | band’s threatening suicide ot thelr ruta and did not oecur. every night. but occasionatly, | (us thing for any one to do just now: y for nice, new spring bon d 3 oF t r ich} Mrs. Cameron's ery rang out as she ryary and broken he 7 it tent ee outied (should happen t Tinwith hin 9 Nacht and those who were present at both pic Hamburg EDGINGS from auction. ight, was swelling with every suecce ling | 1 obliged her s« hear me. ‘They carried on the affairs by let- 2% mndependen} (of any ‘ascertaingd | should Ah aim, you migh ttle Shoal Creek carried off the || MATTINGS, CARP: : st; anid the river was rolling in white caps. | pid (ah and obliged her son fo en ter. They Would not let mesee lim, lest he cause. Sometimes it was repea'ed inees. | Just give iim’ a triendiy hint to destroy all | premitim th’s year for fine bonnets. | The Bix . CARPETS and OLLCLOTHS, Sil there was no question of laying ihe boat by when our party from the hills eame down and went aboard with muchado and mecry- making. The Huntress was a river craft that made santly for au hour or more. The gentleman's | those copies, and to be more careful in fu- hose Was prominent, and its bridge often be- | ture.” It ishardiy necessary to add that the Game sore from the blows wuich ft received. | hint was taken af onee. On one occasion Atone time an awkward sore was produced | eventhese masters of cunning fairly met the that was long in heating, on aceountof th» | Match. Atthe time wen the famous Av‘okal. Shcal Creek Meeting-house had bad weather | uestt® COTTONS, cheap, Sunday, and the rain prevented many fine be 1 8 from 25c. up. r tiom being placed on exhiition. Itis | TYrkey Red Table LINEN. 50c, ap, the first time Years that Little Shoal | White COUNTERDANES,0, 75,8181 25,$1.50, porch Mr. Bassett turned. the rain-dr | Sparkling on his beard and on his thiek bi; | eyelashes, lifting his hat from the low brow, saw. under the ebon masses of hair, 1 should learn my unwillingness. I had reason to be unwilling. Oh, what is the use?” she 1, starting up and going to the window, heié the rain and sleet beat so furiously: | “What is the use? Yet—if my heart woud ; 3 ae str ; e | Cre -k has won a vi Ba Bargains iu Dry Goods cn his whole str face. stra pabwas ie Bio the tos : ‘ ; at conn nm at Desbars, the little port on the yee Ae - ; x rating alto. Teeurrence, night afier night, of the blows | (B Il.) the revolutionary organ of M. Alex- apie ‘a ve le _ 4 bay at the river's mouth, with a sea boat thet cleome Sy See House so Mise TROCUIT ET hake even TE Which frst eaused it. "His witd had to remove | de: Heeven, waein the zenith ofits formidable | themihee eak deere ee 636 Pennavlonses feo Would takes us by a farther voyage to ou e + and passed on, wind iS | Will notsay mueh about him. Lean't’ she the button from the wrist of his nicht-zown, | Fe own, -h+ Russian government alarmed at | or the pi nic endeavors to appear ina neat my1l-tr Bouth 8! journey’send. Indeed. th ress was not | through dark passages, where we lost sight of | Will notsay much about him. 1 ¢a as i: made severe seratehes, and some mans | thy completeness of the information which | coMe bol : snc — abi seubicl an edule ane Wor ant Te ee | He OA ey eee] See ee esate, reside. ot any Were attempted of tying his'ar Muny years | Hild bary the most seeret windings of the im. | Dane bongs sey an thos eee SILKS, DRESS GOODS, &¢.—Wwe are pre- dations were b that w se] e pause athe Reb And talc ie EO . a SOF alter his death, his son ma da lady wao | perial system, determined to silence this tell- ‘all those P dane ie DeuIS aasean. red to Sxhibit the largest and most desirable te eer vabton et wraps. en disappearing to returr ) aety, sit fadnever rata dhe, camiy incident, Sie Qe woe by adnan the elon hime nd while the preacher é Hs the | yard. Bpieued crc 23 2 20.and. $5 cents per 5 ‘ with ba Sand lotions for Mrs.Cameron's | from that moment. Lloved him?" she eried | howev' rod pre | iumeselt 3 caret De ; While the preacher expounds the . Bpiendid stock of Hourettes: Sak eTh improventen with bandages and lotions for Mrs. Cameron's armoment. Jloved Watt a fiarity 13 her husband: bit his nose, from hot | himself at M. Herzen’s house in Landon, un taws laid down in the Gospel, the fadies ert, | Linens, Percaies ‘we, s, Lawns, vi being paiticularly prominent, has never as | eran assumed name, as a revolution ury pro- on her improvised. bed, in w down of all her barri other's spring bc h task Tas. | nets, while the | .Wot¢— Madam Bowman one of the most tashion- ompanions do, ¥ | gf ‘i y plac I i recipitate i yet suffered from the blows. The trick does | pavandist acting against Russia. M. Herzen and old men mentally comn able Dressmakers this side of New York, occupies iplation and seandal, “Among others: | OF the paitys avin teen delegated to allie | MOSH step fatter he had aways | Hot oceur when he Hs half aster, a heard him to theend, and then said quietly: | faces beneath tie. boutiets. H atreet font. ines® 00 second Hor of our story mbered Mrs. Howison, the doyenne M ete Md Syed eho ried y 8 athe ampie, When he is dozing in his’ s onsealment Wi pray, my dea 1) ig & cuat : a ty, Who gave iteminent respectability, (/sagreeable duties—he went over to Miss | been kind to me; Thad kuown noother) stood | bur the moment he is fast asleep, he isapt te | Mr. S—," (calling him by-his real name,) | aoaupel is 2 custom tong ei) i , W. W. BURDETTE & Co. “ owing in popula Bvary year: . 098 3 4 W intermittent; | “Thave been expecting you for some time.” | Nowhere, peraps is seh a strange, it erect. | NOL 900 eke Hw. sometimes coast for many nights, and ine ie struck agent at m pled to uttera | ing and harmless custom. p rpetuated, except leg ——p— . myo-tr sometimes almost ines it during a partof | denial. ooh! quoth Herzen, pro- | in the neighboring county May.—[ Aunsas E GREAT SOUTHE! ery ni ht. Itis performed, as it was with } :/ueing his visitor's likeness from the desk be- | City Tames ne SCORY of Clay.—[ Aansa: I Ts RN SHIRT,” his father, with his right hand. One of his e him, “do you think I don't recognize the OPEN FRONT, Murr: who still lay on the sofa, silent and deathly white. But at the movement she opened her great gray eves, dark from the Tings of shadow now Surrounding them. sti ped her feet to the floor, faltered a second, aad then hastened to Mrs. € Y i before me, the color of death; my mother hung on my neck, sobbing her soul out, the little children huddied togeth the unknown troubie, and I— grew colder and colder, like a corpse. It body up in his pedigree, and did the begin. It is, as with his fa’h with hung upon our verue, as jeented to me neither did T breathe nor my | chitdren, a girl, has inherved the same trick | iginal ‘of this. portr The crestfailen A Home in Greenland. eur +aS | on her knees heart beat. What would ih ppiness be | (hildren, mheryed tne: Tees re htea Coe tes ot " ; Ready-made, with Li Firs, M Hot against us. Of the | Sith sterical sebee wien Dougie by their misery? Teried out to | Sue pettcrme lt likewise, with the rieht hand, | cutovary, retired dn, disgust, and the wary | | Evening sthe livelies! time intheGreentand | linings tothe Bows” ateat Wantage game girls, Miss F was . perhaps, the most beau “Why, Miss Murray, Margaret, my poor | bring him quickly be nied. Tnever | but na slightly modified orm; for altel r | hee spall aed or h suffered to remain un- | hut. Then the bright lamps are burning, the | aud twenty-one hundred Linen, ready to put om ut ct Miss sora With her clear, dark, | gyi ies no hing but a Pe ' i looked up when, 4 half hour after alterward, ing the Arnie she Hoes nog allow the: i molested.—[.V. ¥. Times, Kettles and Pets, (made of soapston 1 for sol $125. Our goods are ‘made by us and lone features gant dayne be fau't- Cameron." My dear, [never he came in. Tiever spoke during the swift | (Urep Ubon the bridge of thé nose, but the parm boiling over each lamp Senin Be reprenened. i dark hair b her man and down | Maple Sugar-Making in Vermont. | S‘@aming au du ore dun uit half-elosed hand falis over omen bastly. crattiae ewe 3 C. GEO, MEGINNESS, a marriage, nor did he, for there were no words eC oed Be) oad Sugar weather has to b t i Women busily chatting at their work, and | psctory—75 w. Fi ner of proud reserve, stimulated curiosity and i +f deine Peniy. | le nose, Striking it rather rapidiy—a decided puga ‘ather has to be “just so,” and one | jai¢- ea ny. . Fayette st, Baltimore, imerest considerably more. fatl and” pee: | Wrepeat; bowed our heads in reply | inprovement.on the father's and ‘grandfa. | Will hear as many predictions regarding that | Malfvaked children running about on the | _iranch—1002 ¥ st. u.w., Washington” apd7-tm to the min estion: er nd to receive his 5 : blessing. Blessi Blessing! I could no id, inthose deep | see, bot even the yiitter of the ri the lights |, to attend tothe | were swimming before me r 1 could think of that I could not. bre till you is complete. either. Before the last word was w ‘oom adjoins your own, across | [fell iusensible. Oh, if 1 had ne: she cried. ingingherhands. “ Whenl haps too stat with her silence and her haughty ways, she impressed you as one with a history: yet when I bad been with her one ay more than usual, Mrs. Howison begged to | tones. “1, € methai people often lost caste by asso- | Patient. Ciating with the monplace, and that Miss Welcome Murray was only Mrs. Cameron's com} on, 0 P i “shay | Warm reindeer skins on the ledge behind ther’s idea. ‘The trick is intermittent in the | #S You will in Connecticut about/a good “hay is isthe s : : >TH periods of some months, but so:netimes al. | {he sugar men are many times disappointed. | after his day's toil on the sea, and while he 1s FIFTH GRAND SPECIAL SALE mos. ince: [The Cornhill: Magazine. inv ean'y getarannd ces erane emauotten hanging up his lines, his water-proof , or the trees vod. and it Is much more of a task, | 424 other paraphernalia, a piece of skin ix BLACK AND being obliged to wear snow shoes :but it wants | Wawn forth frem beneath the ledge and COLORED SILKS. , Mr. Thomas A. Edison has recently invented | a gentle thaw, so the siow wil i spread before hi nts—the small ane dd te lie c oO e tre i » + + 4 : a , settied, Be sh calied “* ve - @: ute reeves puri sro the trouble of shall stay with my mistress,” said Miss | to myself,” she Went on, after a moment,“the | an instrument which is imdoudtedly the ae. | not be over three feet deep, that ea erersy | (led fish calied ““angawsat.” or eapeling—he | We sell a Silk worth 90e, tor 78. Al. thy dear, Dat a few steps atome ene | Murray, suddenly, and wi hont looking up. room Was but dimly Hgited; a physician at marvel of -he eentury. It is called the | fairsnow. Of course, when the thaw doescome, | &ats in silence, w she is. This is only a sell a Bik worth $1 for 87ige, ea the good DameHowwinon coke | He Stopped and surveyed her, whether | the door was saying Something about couges Speaking Phonograph,” or, adopting the In- | gencrally speaking, it continues to settle until | Piliminary meal, and appetizing pastime, | We sell aBiK worth $1.12 far $1. t person in her place. but Mrs. | @™Maz ['wondered that this haughty and | tionof the brais. My mother followed tim idtor ay aptly cailit * The Sound. | sugaring is done.” It S cold, freezing | While the more substantial things over the eb ta pad “l her- lamp are getting ready—and it does not take We sell a Silk worth $1 50 tor $1 25. , 7 out. Ki rushed over me, ail that Chad done, | Wilter who talks-"> Much cutlosity has been | nici kug tie y * We the bondage of iny life, ‘the desolation of my | expressed ai the Workings of this ins runent, | will tun! Bui if too warm trees have bees Jon to: Doll seal esky Alter the fish he takes Wesell a Suk worth 2 15 (ar $140. lover—oh, terribly! AS my mother closed she ~o J purpose giving an account of it. put to labor, a warm spel comes, then no sap, | 2 Graught from the Water-pail behind the oat door behind her, I sprang from the lounge, All talking machines may be reduced to | and then they must, if a “sugar day" comes, go | Jor. The skin curtain of the ledge hiding | Persons who wish to buy Sitks are assured that . ind caught up such of my clothes ay had been | twotypes. ‘That of Professor Faber, of Vic | over the whole Libor, if the hole where the tap the’ mysteties of tne lower régions, Is. one We mean what we say. removed. and ina fever-strength, dashed ou Is the most perfect example of ohe type: | was diiven tu has become seared. Wood has | More Grawn aside, and the skin wich the |g. ,Wenave what we advertise, ofthe window. I made for the’ river: bu: Edison is the only example of the | to be gathered in quantities to the amount ex. | Tempants disappear behind it. to join a host | yey york aud Pliiwdel hin and wee el eee when T saw its dark torrent f grew full of to be made, “It is an expectant thing, | Heal Or talking iu the telgine wales: A 200d | offer the greatest bargains ever soon Intec” anger toward those who had driven me there. Hithrough. A bucket holds about two | eal of talking in the ret oar: T seemed to hate them too much to drown m bucket is supposed iomake one | Chattin CONNOLLY’S, self. But I dropped my shawl there, to hus pound of sugar, and for every one hundred ap27-tr 608 Ninth street, opp. Patent OMes, i to mislead them all. Ob, well, well, no mac sounds of sugar a cord of wood is gen netly trom my many A eutures, BOOKS AND STATION 22 iv} Becents aboutthe rest. I found work at last, foun: ; used. The suzar houses are genera'ly built as | Greenland hutsare the svories and des concealing by the disguise of pleasure in Col. hevidently had | this place afterward with Mvs, Cameron; vo y reed bie piteh, forms is vo ear the center of ihe sigar grove as possible, | OF the men re to their sea st appeared, and | ; Boc rao then again dived down on his approacaing it; | N 2 W BOOM List. ungracious young Wom in acknowled: se'fa servant, or that she ‘did it so Bur after the 2 he only bowed. ng day: id then how sap rsell Kuows next to nothing abc although she has employed her for nea FS; So you See, my dear,” said the do ¢ Oy eae ever: And her authority perhaps added a | theless, the re ee a ae ae aid mepneral behasit , ed 4 | opening the doors which led to it, aud ithe i eyal DenAyION ofthe mudsand | Tresently leaving us together. Beile Evans was also not without int I went into the room, of course, and look est to the impa:tial view, the mot sh y 1 : riedona anda 'flirtation at the same nt with John Cameron y been broken it, it Was understood, wh dition of her system’ she was supposed to be Falter worked at the source of sand built up an ar. peech, Whose parts, as verform the same funetions as correspoudi niga In « 1 apparatus, i st “9 comfort » tha re cept seas f suffering. have been in the ere i Col. Bates being the nexi dem omfortable thanthe rest of | cept for seasons o: n . end of Johu Cameron himself. ASfor Lucia, | the house for Mr. E sett himself. A dark | main at peace. And now—now—do you wi | ind ahape cat Re s Mar: « joubtless some por- | rug nearly covered it, thick curtains incl rs 7 e Miss Mar-in and the rest, doubtless some por- | rus nearly cov ered Ab jailer enrtalg y nelosea have never seen; but this man—this other: tiv eral cavity, whose s of a side-hill bush, under the hill, so the sap | #ecompaniea bs the most a Puy eheuged By de i pau be me from cae) tree, in puts, to , 1 key-board. rabber | hou f not aside-hill, then carrying in pails ‘ and lips make the consonants; ali tle | or drawing on sleds tothe house,wherea larze, | How he Che hunie: derstand? Tam the wife of a man when I ne th Miss Marsin and She Fest, doubtle me : y Ongli e \ in his turn had lingered | Wallace's Tropteal Nature... $3.50 BIT LE at hd Bday ote ge rr oie a adeee OG Rg ee ee | Willnever let me go again. He— is dinil!, turning in its throat, rolls the iecter | -hallow, tlat pan is ready to receive {t. ‘This | bebind till the animal, made incautious by the | Moaern Dwelliugs. By Ho iy. 4.00 Were, We had passed some pleasant days to | hung upon the wal: there wasa huge jar of | ‘Miss Murray! Dc ‘avd a tube is attached to its no-e when it | pan holdsanywhere from forty to one Mnindred | ChSulue silence, again rose to the sur | Pogenue People, Birs: St 23 gether, for even although Melle eves dey is there. were books and. papers; and | “Oh, 1 mean that M beaks French, This is the anatomy of tnis | and filty buckets of sap. The pan sits on a | HOW the hunter, leaning back with a graceful | Ie" Titian cue Ms 133 thore distracting, drove Cameron tothe beat phernalia, “itis hisown room: | _ Just then at the door on the other sic e ly wonderful piece of mechanism. sits on d sort of oven ; underneath is the fire. | Movement, shows how he resolutely swept | {ueanity and its Preventi i uing of despair by her behavior with Gol. room came the imperative tap that I a aber attacked the pro'lem on iis phys » The sap is boiled continualiy until the right | 2¢F°SS a jong sal ge, and came within reach of | Studio. Field and Gallery 150 males = who tas blicdiy oomeinees chat ee ae i—I—oh, don't you see—" be. | recognized. T sprang to answer it; b: oxical side. Quite differently works “lr. Edi | consistency is obtained, when it is turned off. | MS) mark, tock aim. and threw his harpoon | odus dis. Howry A. 125 did his friend good service in keeping her gan Miss Murray; but just then Belle broke | opened the door, meaning to make ex ase, | om: he attueks the problem, hotat the source | And so the work goes on until not a drop drops | 41d, bladder float; how the wounded animal | Janet. 5 1% from worse misehief—and Cameron reduced into the room, silencing herself at our hush. | aud so refuse entranes. it was gently pashed | of origin of the vibra ious which made ariicu. | trom the tree. Some farmers make immense | {lived and again came to the surface, and so | Mis Burnett™= Miss Crespigny 50 Belle ta the same. pass by the exasperating ic. | ing, out of my grasp, and Mr. Bassett ca nein. He | ste speech, but, ¢ nsilering these vibrations | amounts. ‘The price for good sugar is.all the | forth, In fact, he paints the scene with the | Ks enetarhier. 35 aillerence with which he viswGr hee thee How is she?” she half whispered. ‘In | walked directiy'to Margaret; Dut she rolled | 1s alteady’ made, iv matvers ‘not how, “he | way from six to Alten cents per pound.. ‘The | Most lively colors, as we all listened in wrapt 0 Set such sweet surruw secmed bette: to Gow Yoor Mrs. Cameron? Asleep? How | the chair between them, and Stood leaning on | makes these vibrations impress themselves ou | last price Is for the first sugar-—[ Bond rile (Vt) | attention. My brother, who had a lively com. 4 Epparcatly than any common expericnce s Luela,takes it easity, doesnt he? Oh, | its top, her head thrown back, her color uigh, | «sheet of metallic foll, and then reproduces | Letter to the Hartord Fumes, prehension and a great talent for mimicry, ; ao joy, and they did their best to prolong and ae | Miss Twombfy? oh, Miss Mul This is just’ | the picture of beautiful defiance. His own | from these impressions the sonorous vibra- <n ad iu after years in Denmark often to act the . CRdgUET, in aii styles. Rhtdate it Lis betier than enowels te | the quecrest, delightfulest old place—-full of | facewas radiant. “You are making a last | ious whieh mace them. : Howrom, THE STRONG MAN.—Holtum | part of the Seal-hunter, and it strikes me that | SOLOMONS © CHa. I ood as a play,” sald Louce to: Miss Macsat: | romance. Hi only-we could stay here till Mrs. | stand,” he said. holding out his arms. Faber solved the problem by raproducing | stretches himself along a ladder on his face, | 1 had myself a part in a play representing an | _mx22-tr 911 Pennayloaniaaernue, For‘in spite of Dame Howison, we had som. | Cameron were quite well again’ Justa litle | _Her arms fell’; she became pallid and trem. | the mechanical causes of the vibrations mak. | his fet against one of the rungs, and his hands | UNSuccessful whale hunt. Certainly we had t : : ng att sie ee d any 4 ; free, | "(HE LATEST PUBLICATIONS. = in. Why couldn't she—” Burt Belle in- | wlous; her voice shook “Iam here,” she | ing voice and speech: Edison solved it by ob- | elaspinganother. Round his wrists are bands | bad many an hourof amusement in fhe Green- — tire Ranke and’teal betote you. and treet” | Terai tied” hersell just there. “ile says we | murmured, “because I cannot help it.” taluiing the mechanical effects of these vibra. | fastened in the ladder to assist his grip. Over | land cottages. No doubt we were very unpre ™ is of History, by Sam‘l. Willard, Mod- Bireatchine her eye again when she simiied | must.’ she Went on." But then, you khow, of | ,, {ANd you think T will take no advantage of | tious. Faber reproduced the movements of | his shoulders and around his waist a Well. | tending, and easy to please in the extreme: | ort Dwehines’ fi'ory, by Sam. Willard. ra Te catehiNg Der ey Se2tn when she smiled | Must, ‘she Itsa reat adventuges | it? he éried. "Margaret! when 1 saw yu | onr vocal organs: E-lison reproduced the mo- | added harness, iting closely. with a tall; to | Dut why criticise the means when the result is | Hous, "Stanfls, Fad sad Gane ae Histo eatl Scmewhat too indignant. concerning the | :nd_ oh! isn't it ous? At any rate we | inthe storm, and a thunder-bolt seemed to | tions which the drum-skin of the ear has when | which is attached a hook In. which the chains | hap daria. frpety dae mete aay Were, | Sreatins, Wook. by G; B- Boardman. | How te shrubs and bios oas. with which Fung can't f° while the storm lasts. Get down on | have fallen at my feet, and the grave to have | this organ is acted on by the vibrations caused | of the traces are placed. The good-sized van | ali e dark. frosty days, with the moon | Paint Photographs, by G. B. Ayres. | Spactrum Black was loading her then to smile at all. your knees, Miss Murray, and pray that ii | £iven up a ghost, and my heart stood stili— | bythe movements of the vocal organs.—[ Popu- | horses are fastened on, and strive their utmost | Shining down upon at noon tide, and in the oe RR Lecngers Inter, Sel. Be, as se 5 - * ; i Series, liee Perry; = ven Bivas 7 i a st a “Kk. “ie , come al when I saw you fall out there on the sea-w-ed, | lar Science Monthly. to move him, but in vain; the tackle may give | ealm, delightful summertime, with its bright . 3 ace look like Birnam Wood,” Belle had | shal as) a wee aiding panels false ddoce, | and snatched yon in my arms, and had. you —_—__———______. way, but he ‘doesn't. The strain seems to be | Sulit nights. —[ The Field. the Wiiniwina,? iy aujcrical! Rvotion.- Reaping ; m The ee cried. i r “ 2 i y thing.” held against my breast; do you suppose there RESULT OF A TELEGRAPHIC BLUNDER.—A | distributed over his whole frame, and the ten- . "LF, joney. God Sonof a Mi vg ‘And feel as If Dunsinane were at thoends | everything” tas turned gently to. | wasn Wild plunging and rocking of thas | dispatch was sent from New tlavon let ceea: | Sion, pariculariy in’ the mnereg on tle meni opeRGUTECL FATE, OF A Litre Grei—A | ret. Less Black Than We Ae Palgtad. by Jaton iy Marvin, then looking Miss Mur. | close the door Isaw Miss Murray throwing | Waking heart, no hot surging of my blood. ~ announcing the score iu the rifle match | andarms is most marked. Holtum hasanother qeaseay has ane Sock Unehted t f. fearful Payn. Deceivers, + ‘Lovett ray over from head to foot, talked afterwards | up her arms with a desperate gesture, and | afier all those’ years of tetror and torture, | petween the City Guard of this city and the | feat, It consists in holding, with arms ou'- | TAkedd ti) weatar ottawa on tha Gi Ppl ld ge noel co OH by &. Trollope. © Lucia s she a it 5 »pportu- a back she stood leaning on tha | When you came like the resurrection of the allingfol ompany, in which the latter ed, orses pulling opposiie ways. o wa, © Hheyewith an odd SOFe aE tre lens ieee: | Waele Sher head bowed. herfalien hair hans, | dead?’ Do you suppose I-would forego the | were successful bya. score of 503 against S13, | Holtum’s measurement sas follows: Chests Rock Island and Pacitle railioad. | Abou tive ilo 1 2 Memoir of Wan Fy Bu tween the syllables. The eior eam: to Miss | Ing over her elasped arms, the pieture ofde. | flerce joy of those moments, as walked up to | ‘he telegraph operator got the figures trans. | inches; neck, 16'4 Inches; waist, 323s inchs: | (@3§ ago a li-tle gil, bright and sprightly, : Wyville Thomson vols. B Murray's face ; but she never noticed anything What in the world did it meanz | this gate, for all of heaven? Do you suppose s and on the receipt of the diispated “the foreary 18 inches 5 uy Pe him, 13s, Inches age Monyhan, a laborine was oon euer ot taps and illustrations, $4a, om Oe of the d. not even thanking Be yi it was not concern for Mrs. Cameron, | | Will ever let you go again? ‘came jubilant, and it was al pro- zh, ches ; 5 3 height, 5 | ar i + Nine ee IOHUN BROS., Elance wheirthe latter resentedcher affcodts: | was it dementia? “Had the storm and the ex: | _ But, as she raised her eyes, full of suffering, posed t0 give the victorsa hearty welcome | fee! Y'incltes; weight, i sidneS pounds; age, | {en and she let the house, telling che melzi. | my 18-tr Booksellers and Stationers, 15 PX av, ooltively affrontel: but eominoniy dat sae | bethoucht me. had there not always been | heimadethaste to step tomard Rer;and taking | to tisend.a transparency was painted with | — Holium's.a Dane, and took to this busines in | f0F, kitty." Some of the nelxhbors a mile be- | ()UR BOOK LIsT For MAY, ysitively a led, ommonly that she ous! a 8 Was Mb ‘h Dane, at k to thi y - ; ain} Nas completely ignored. It seemed tomake | somethingof insani’y inthe way in W her hand to draw her round in spite of herself, | he victorious score, the wine and “fixings” | 18/2, The idea of catching a cannon ball, | eared fin duiriite for Kee pee Hoe tate | CWalks tn London. by A, J. ©. Hare, $8.50; The smal odds ther” she reminded you of some | eairiesher eyes, looking down? and s a her Au the chair. “My. poor child. urdered, ond te the Gnion este Ate gad iibite daily ne Westiultater Antero as in the evening, finding her absent aud learn! aakine 2nd ether ems by Spencer. $135: A one who, being Li life, must get through it, but |“ Meanwhile the house nearly justified Belle, | he said, will not try you, wil uot troudie | diums, marched to the Cuion depot a Beier Ss cnrarar ee He draws | ing the facts, concluded that she had gone so | Tyal@ Cleliltenss Paradise Lost, by Himes, $1.60; locked for no ure in it. corning the dis: | One of any imagination might revel in the | You, Listen, Margaret, dear, while I tell you | he arrival of the train, due at 9:3) pm. Ar | first suggest per week. He mae {Ws | near Lasalle, four miles from Utiea, that sh MC. Report ag: Sackorman, $1.00; Orto's ane : if Gis: 101 a M y 4 7 OWA mae ne appointed hour in came the cars: ths | a Salary of about £40 per week. He hasshown | 2 < : , she | 8. 4 $5; Cockcroft’s Table of g : a : nue s toon eh He did not hunt for her that night, but sent | $12: Clifford's C. C “Reports, vol. 3: Not se Pleasure and she were not | afterward becoming atavern,and then, | ing down ou her, the simile and the radiance | {Wv0% BC ESR eee eee ere | oe Ne tone London Oor. N.Y. Sun Word to them the nextday. He received an | Yol 8, new series. We have just received separable terms. The litle creature was like unt of smugglers, ithad been altered to | Still making his face splendid. © We allhave | Vor pechonded to by the “team,” who were in |. DYING OF Bray WorK—When we hear | auswer that she had not been there. He and | ®80Ftment of the new styles tu Stationery, inclul- ‘ al some fly sporting in the sun; but let the beam | their pu he said, ina moment or two. fade, and she w s ‘ e that : ing Fancy Boxes of Paper and Kuvelopes, and r wie Pacige | {he cars. At last, one of the returning men, as | hat a man has killed himself by excessive | his neighbors then began asearch for the miss- | Catas and) Envelopes, papel Sailor wrecked an the Pacife | ie stepped fom the cars, saw something. difs | brain work, we feel that we should like to | ig one, and continued it unl last evening, | QAr’gand Eavelopes. 1n wood and pap Ad - rposes; in the next generation it hid grandfathers, i fall. It did not seem, | been refitted with some sumptuousness as a | “ Mine vasa on were absolutely neces | family mansion. Although threadbar seas. He mar x el a | a om nets or eye fell upon the transpareney, wih its score | Lave the witnesses in court in order that we | When her body was found in a most horrid | dered promptly. sary to the come not that sunpea | the carpets hi cl on been rich at straight hatred, ot ae featured, dari faced bh eter the “593” looking particuiarly | May rigidly cross examine them. What sort condition, wit heavy stones piled upon it, a we. H. & 0. H. MORRISON, been pointed & was by an | carved and overlaid with gildiog He acquired ascendancy over the sim: | ¥#/T.vating. ‘He hauled down the offending | of Work wasit? Was it brain work pure, or | mile and a half west of Utica. As tramps LAW BOOKSELLERS, ure that befell ici, when they were found, in | tiaty destroyed. “What_chance he ple islanders: endowed him with | Sigmand tore it into fragments. Amazement | Was it mixed up with anxiety, worry and ex | Swarm the canal bank between these two | _myl4-tr 475 Penna. ave. th ¥ : cItement? What were the man’s habits? Did | places, her tragic fate is thus accounted fi one of our mountain rambies, in answer to | this state,as 2 d fal ‘ - | Yast flelds and’ forests. When commerce | Woes hot describe the situatlon of the boys | 5 Zé 1 z f y her fri i . r ‘] Bee's agonized and repeated shrieks cling” { Hy andowe and ai were extint, We Could net found the island out, selling his ramie fibre | Wbobad arranged the greeting. At a tne a ea re gouty hltmecll Of jose aia, | 3 er friends. THE TRADES eMippery stevp, and holding tolliebyabraneh | “'WM"> sighed Lucia, “we must make the | Hrench and German houses Win ekteace tree | it-—-LAlurijord Times ASked ad nS WeIe. oe ete Coats Be | oF CRAu I nie Heese nie Fae Sropr @ slippery steep, and holding to life bya braneh I 2 x H : “hic: ale pad gs from falling into the | most of this storm. 1 suppose mall have some | ita precious vil, he accumulated Linmense asked and answered, we suspect it would be | OF GRAMMAR.—The Chicago Legal Vews con- OoK BIN DIN@. re ’ JEALOUSY ATA SALT Lake THEATRE.—On | 'ound that the man who is supposed to have | tainsa novel decision respecting public schools. ora ol tive ledge ¢ shake lifted lis teat, | Gries, absurd seruples about slaying even | eee rae ca Tat eee gaugnter of an | Friday evening, John W. Young's last coneu. | died of excessive mental eneruy, died rather | It seems that the rules of the igh sehool re: | , TR¢_PabiC ss reepecttully informed that the ee een tall ithe fies drembin ay | o¥erto-nizht. and she's bound to go to-mor- | American sea-captain from this region, and | pine, Luella Cobb, accompanied by” her | of want of fresh ait and exercise, of too much | quired candidates to pass an examination in | EXSETT Pox EINDERT , 2 curried on os cFoingand ali unstrang, Welle was helped put | fly tethers Mada eomie torand we aq | €lild,and hte. and my Wealth ie sit rong | Mufley, went fo the theatre and seated ner. | Hrewater sn some Yorm or another, of horrl | Englis) grammar. Fhe paiolif's som had | ployeayaga the Nore arked’ oi eal Seis to of danger in the midst of her shrie bur | our trunks, just think of the masjnerades and up. I was ediicated ia Europe, but these it self in the dress-circle on the east side of the | Ule financial embarrassment, of late hours and | never studied grammar and declined to be superior Sole wach a ‘been a character- e ‘as Cel, Bis ' rn fn house. Shortly after the performance com- | excitements other than those pure work | examined in it. He passed in the other sudies Margaret lingered, as Col. Bates and young | theatrieals we could get up! What a house re my home. I returued there, | menced, Libby. John, the eunoobine who pre- | breeds in the human brain. Tlendon Stan- | but was refused admission, his father claiming | _1012 Pa. ave. 84 floor, ape-ly Black grasped her’ wrist from above, to have | for a runaway mateh ‘as proud of shom, of my noble and in- | ceded Luella in the list of the prodigal John’s | dard. the right to have his son enter the school with- one look down the dark abyss. And aithough |* The Black Prince of the Forest, watening | nocent islanders, and of my dark strain of | CiuGee made her appearance lin te eee out Knowledge of mar and go through ona, Belle was Seaied 35, tS sompound ef Rerolae his chance, sreus in behind P beodolinda from Wietata tence Blood oe eeu pringes. proscenium box, on the east side of the house. Pun Sap pane or yaerix lagtrepine the term of The Sehoo!, omitting that study. iw HAMreniee Ave M Sreenr, and martyr, ery ud shive! ugh- | a withdrawing panel,” cried Belle, “and clap- | is 2 ours. | } Ss] elegram from Tarboro, N.C. Says: the refusa y ing by turns as she was the rest of the day,and ping his shapely and across ‘her lovely jips, | Well, to hasten, Among my. business corres. | accompanied by Amelia and another widow ea ities ae ays: The court Rela the retusal 10 oe ee boy Nogtuwset. - novi-ly t she F i ‘ This trio had hardly got seated before Libby | late yesterday evening declaring that she thought the face of that off—" and there I left them to their non: ondents was one who visited the islands. Joh ied Luell: id be; aki daughter of ‘illiam Smith, of Hatteras | father to elect the son’s studies if the study ht snake Was the face of the Great Enemy him | sense. Iked to me incidentally of his familyvand | JomR spied Luella, and began making re. | , a study he Seif, Yet the other went about her duties quict- ae iSean speaking of these capabilities of the | afterward, on his return sent mo a Shots marks, evidently cailing the attention of her | [sland, Dare county, was drowned from the | discarded had no necessary connection with ‘ By ne thouse, which is surr ° ene wee, Washington ly aiid unnoticed as before, it being somehow | houseto Miss Murray when f rejoined he. | graph of tis daughter. Towe it to a vein of | Companions to her, “fellah's” other conn. | em Wenthowe, wilde is surrounded by water. | the studies he elected for him, as, in this | gy®mine Printing aiieauele ed reeognized by tacit consent that, no matter | “aig tt dee bine in the dress-circle. But this was not instanee, grammar with the physical and "c aTect the romance for them | Sentiment, perhaps, that I fell blindly in love had thrown open her door to the sea | exact sci 8. w sma! ifference to Miss ul 5 y BA S by Mm sel a a “Col. Bates now folded her wrapsmore closely | Drandy Kees and bales of ska "S84 | Tents that were riches to himself as welras to. | Of the whole audience, she pushed the curtains | \t fell from her hand and rolled into the stair. asto | of the box back, bowed forw: way, the slide being drawn, and in at! emp Ing Prey he AccrpENr. ir Cincinnati, (on | yy Juniata oe a ae 7 Patented Spetoe toe pont - ‘nd ” ag , Zot up, wer forward over " ay (,a@ Mrs. Hennig, while crossing about Belle under the awning of the little To my consternation she looked up witha | her. He bide me come on. I did so, my th Stine Noor Bo Ww d to pick it up she slipped ‘and fell, fem ead | Pearl street, ne: Egglest was Pad ting Awning Hotels, Publie Stcamer's deck, and sat beside her, while Cam thered © Tfeltin tl i heart bounding with hope. But when I ar- eras lown and turned up her i fee Oe tat needles dings and a av's Gee 3 sad Gone ite ae smothered cry OF horror. eltin the midst Ps al nose at Luella, who, with her mother to help striking the irom steps. She fell into the lings. Fiigeana is i ; Buil vate ‘ hop struck senseless by a missile that made a flesh sale or rent. Sole oe “And that was true, | rived | found by the dallying that there was | fier, teered back: And thus the sient war | Water, gave three piercing screams, and was | woundextending from er right templearound | Shits SreSh weels, Agent, for the only gen Slauehed round his ears, and his cigar smoke | then? she exclaimed, “Concealed trouble. I penetrated 40 the cause T fait : Fo ene glent War | carried out by the surf just as her fatl Pig at iret chat | mare aw soplb-tr — Seadine ise tna clout and Mist Wares falleriew~at exe laure’ a Ga hay one theu that probably the girl would marry me, continued for a time. We expected to see | carried out by the as Tr father came | to her forehe: It was thought at first that " to the door. ‘She wasa beautiful girl, the beile a - leaned over the stern, sate aud dry. in her | tightening before—the toils. But now! but | Dut Would she ever love me? Tdevermined to | Witty hone Koen dee it ese ed telih, 88 | of ‘Dare county. and kuowll asthe ligushouse | ot¢,had been shot by a stray ball from an air. rPuE WoRLys cHoIce. water proot garmen mostly watching th: | now ™ andshe paced the for ikea caged an | insure that frst. I put myself iy her way un. yalmy days of the Prophet Brigham.—(suit | Keever's pretty daughter, Sie was to have | that one side ofa siall pebble, heavily press-d and churnin a mal. y' 4 i we en married on ne: an ri 3 reet Huntresshad labored, or the steep shores tht, | "Certainly this is a mad-woman, and this isa | ended asl wished, I belleve'she did love me, dhs 2 eal with her betrothed only haif an hour before | wheel. was browalied agies the Lation es ar | pcihe Centennial Jurors represented the ctvitized if sunshine clothed them in beauty, foul weata- | mad-woian, I was saylng to myvelf, but I | shall see. But then, in some insanity, I | JonNSuTHERLAND’s ROMANCE.—John Suth. | ier death. : waterinelon seed between the thumband fore. | physicians of world wide reputation er made only frowning and forbidding. learned what her self-control was when, at | feared, if she found me out, she might have a | erland, who isemployed by the Singer Sewing finger, with a force sufficient to cause the | ‘he manufacturers of Benson's Capcince We had expected to reach Desbars by noon, | Mrs. Cameron’s awakening moan in the oppo- | revulsion; perhaps I wanted to tegt her, per- | Machine Company. Tn Elizabethport, NJ. THERE is no lack of officers in the British g hed. | Piaster the only medal given to Porous Plasters,on # ; J 9 i damage as deseri' but owing to the increasing storm, it was loug | site room, she sprang lo her side, quiet as a | haps I wanted to hear her glad ery of surprise veral years tai army and navy, and whatever misfortunes ——————————— account of its great superior! er all other Pyrous: asced ood When, the way wideuing into the | nunzand learned, too, what Miss Murray's | When she learned that the ‘husband’ she | sie Ae aid soe acess vores trom iis) Bin soldiers and sailors may bedoomd to | Low Prices Maan Low WaGEs ror Pro. | iasters and. it ‘wonderful ‘paiu-rolieving’ and y, the town appeared, a darker spot on the | possibilities of beauty were, wih that dark | dreaded was the man she loved, 1 pushed the | much saddened by the breakin; undergo in the tuture wars wili not be brought DUCERS, $0 that it is not necessaril: strenj quali dark horizon, which, after balanciog of pro hair, usually bound So severely away, drop- | freak one step too far. Oh, Margaret, Mar- home. Three or four weeks ay fe Ot nls about by lack bf leaders. For the 297 ships in | for rejoicing when one finds a falling marker, ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN and cons, it was judged unsafe for the ht ‘e | ping now in rolling tresses about the cheeks | garet, my dar! ing: he cried. with trembling | day, while he was visiting Williamsburgh, | ¢OMmission in the navy there are 332admi But at a time when many men and women are steamer to approach, and the Huntress came | whereon a crimson stain seemed crushed. Fords, ‘do you know—do you know now that | where helived before the divorce, he unexpect- | Nd 161 regiments are ‘supplied with 828 gene- | unemployed, and when wages for the employed | if Benson’s Capcine Porous Plaster is not the best to anchor out in the bay, shut in bya world | An hour afterward, during which we both am your husband?” _ edly met his former wife at 3d and south 8h | Fals- les these generals there are neacly | are exceedingly low, it is worth while to note | Plaster in the world. It was invented to overcome of mist and rain, pitching up and down, wita | composed our toilet, a servant announced | — The tears were shaking before my gaze like | streets. They stopped to speak to each other, | Re colonels and 2,000 lieutenant colonels—in | that quotations at’ the Produce Exchange | te slow action of the ordinary porous plaster, her head to the gale, there to remain till the | dinner, sayiug she was to stay with Mrs. | an old fool's, and I could only see hin bend. | he went to her home, and had a long, jull, and | i! 13,898 superior officers, of whom 11,167 are | show a corres) ding shrinkage. Mess pork LAME BACK! tide turned, there being a difference of more | Cameron in our absence. ‘I can’t go. In. | ing over her unresisting form, only see the | free talk with her, which removed much of the | 0D full pay. sold in New York on Monday at $8.40 per bar. than 2) feet in the turning of the tide in thar | deed, indeed, indeed, T can't,” wilspered | light bursting from her eyes, and her arms | old trouble. He propcsed afremarriage, and a ‘A CHURCH WITH THREE ORGANS —Grace P. | Teh and prime western lard for B72 P 100 | _ For lame and painful back, weak rheuma- bay. Miss Murray. ‘“It—it would—" Her words | suddenly lifted toward him, When I ran out of | week ago they were remarried in uizabeth- | eh ‘New York, has been enlarged and | Pounds for June delivery. These are the lowest | tism and all local aches and pains it is the Of course it was not long before the distress | were cut short by Mr. Basset himself, who, | the room. port.—[. ¥. Sun. at urch, oe ee n enlarged and | prices quoted in May during the last twenty. | best remedy ever devised or known, of the party, between hunger and seasickuess | tapping on the door, entered, took Miss Mur: | | Whata world it was that wel looked out on a & aire organ of macammcth Glasoneions SasDT; Phree years. In Baltimore corn is now selling and horror of the night in that litle eabla, | ray'shand and placed it on ‘ls arm, and she | next morning!—sunshins vivid as the storm AN UNCOMMONLY Baurat Mop | atthe same time an electric attachment has | atysah cents per waster CAUTION = There are traudulent and worthless caused other plansto be considered; and pr s | went along as if IT Was an to avoid a scene. It was, | had been violent, azure heavens bendin; that killed Christopher Mutehle: ‘2 | Been provided whereby the organist can oper- ——— eutly Ik was announced that those wh» woul | perhaps, fo everybody's amazement that he | azure seas that folied in mighty yeastly bi. | thief, in Germantown, Cal tie was tency | at¢ any one oF all three of the instruments to | COMING To Liz Arrer SBEMING DEATH. ths word Gapetne ent iurougn fen? caer hae Were to be taken ashore in boats, where a | iead her to the head of the table, und sat her | lows clothed with rainbows, great clitts fram. | from’the jail, and forced to kneel on the head | ther {rom the same Ke; om stand: | A tel from London, Ontario, says:—Mr. | “gold by all Druggists, Price, 26 cents. my20-mws dwelling could receive them till conveyances | inthe place, opposite his own. Bu‘ ir really | ing the picture with their dark red shadows | of a ba'rel, while the lynchers tried tue.r | } Wm. Pace, employed at Haskett's paintiag | —————_—_-—____- ESTs u were found. To be sure, neither Mis» | made no difference where anybody sat, ex- | round which the birds were whiriing. Mrs. | marksmanship on him with revolvers. O @ shop, had a sick child, and at 4 o'clock on TT a ay certifies: ** Dr, Marvin nor Lucia could think of such a thing | cept for the right and left of the host, as tuere | Cameron was better, and coaches we @ at the .] after another shot at bim, until a bujiet ht Mon jy mocning 1 Soomingy Se. The child *? Thou as being slung over the rail into the boats that | was no carving to be done, and the ‘servants | door to take us Into Desbars, where our | bim in the shoulder, and he fell from bar- came sliding down the side of a billow,and | handed oe ova Mr. Bassett had, I | steamer liy atthe wharf with the rest of the | rel. Then he was tied toa tree, and the sport itdead. Not a coupe. that the case was they screamed, and shut their eyes, and were | thought into Pesbars, storm or no storm, rts was continued until he died. otherwise entered inds of any one, and en id Vhere is four young woman, Mrs. Camer- at 100'clock xe body was = — . aweke and spoke, and itis alive and well. lock-out at the Bennington ( it, Sent slung over ; as for Belle, she was so seasick she larged hishousehold according to his = asked Dame Howison, as Mr. Bissett Drawer” may be bel spread to some ‘other mills. {mitations of Benson's Piasters in the mar- 5] gid uot eare what became of her,and never | needs. Certainly amore princely dinnerthan | on’ sa-It Harper’: knew whether Col. Bates or John Cameron | that is seldom served, though with out wet pa ien y out his patient and wrapp2d the robes | a little girl ‘wrote to her absent on Hike Clg uc telaaiehe PARES | PentL SS Geer oeie a tig ta | “eb four, pardon” uid Mim. camer n, | ene Gest SitaatiatanE eee and i s wel iss | col om et g your amer a “2 ray and J sid to ous seats, helped only by | she dared ho: take her diamonds out ot the | thn, Sy = * eS (ee © : eines won: ae

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