Evening Star Newspaper, November 23, 1881, Page 7

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8T. CECILIA’S. tender ministrations of an adorin; = x . a i i husband, as | every clerk as the yellow ilence is, the ‘e = bECH acinar eee Sqeuy clerk ag the yellow. pestilence fag 1s THE HAT. rom the ara Tarried Lady. A Bold Stroke; or, The Cashier's Danghe | CICK HEADACHE. . Prom Harper's I Meanwhile Senator Belfair himself was not | She put on her hat, and opened her umbrella, | A Paristan Drawing-Room Recitatien | © ‘7, Spee From . Everybody in the city knows the tittie place, | idle. Yesterday he had called with anew novel, | and walked home, dazed and dizzy, as unable by Coquelin, e other day s Col. Bascap was arrested and Saag eee tepeice ITS CAUSE AND CURE. toward the boundary, where the names of the | 40d the day before with a box of bonbd to think for a while, as if'a blow had struck and | T¥#n-lated by Mins E,W. Latimer in the December | #1Talgned before a justice's court on a charge of | “"No; I refuse. Streets run into the dregs of the alphabet. It | *t4,te-day he had sent a basket of orebids, and | stunned her. 8 Baron, abusing a colored woman. “Reflect a moment, Myrtle, T beseech you! has none of the pretensions of the «rand neigh. | Ul,t? NO avail. Maria had no time for the | | Here was Senator Balfair’shand. He hadhad | _™ Paris, monologues arethe fashion. Some| ‘what did this man do?” asked the judge of | You hold my life and happiness in your hands,” | | Sic Hestache is one of thowe terribte chronie Arcana reachevalphast ol umeneictat ads is . she never ate bonbons, and she had | thisthing done. And she had few friends in the | aTe in verse; some are in prose. At every matl- | the woman. and the voice of Adelbert Tompkins trembled as | 2! 8s been overlooked by the medieal facalty, becausm f the Capi e White House region, | plenty of flowers of her own. Then he came | world and they were all away, some of them at | Nee, dinner party, or soiree the mistress of the | ‘He used snltin’ language, sab.” lia spoke Giese wi i ft | few peopleever Ale dincetiy frvan it, but may suffer the Ror any of the architectural picturesqueness of | ith his superb team for her mother and herself | the ends of the earth; and perhaps hone of them | entertainment makes it her duty to provide | ‘What did he say?” 2 ecg genni degen errs ereamtd) | MRC tome meer a those about the Lezation, with their bays and irive. She was on the point of declining, | could help her—certainly not General Shurtleff, | 8me little scenic recitation, to be gonethrough | . “I was workin’ at his house, an’ while he was | Te. even for an instant, any doubt as to | SN sich equrzeasan a © peaks and es. It te only aaiaall weoden | NHe8 Mrs. Von Luitphen declared it was the | who was in an open quarrel with the head of her | by St. Germain or Coquelin. The one which | on de front porch a. colored genleman come | their being the outpouring of his heart. See eae eee oad ee ee as very thing, and the doctor had long since told | department: certainly not 3M murtleft, who | ehjoyed the greatest. success last winter was | up an’ axed, “is dah a colored lady heah | Myrtle Mahaffy wasa beautiful girl, just bud percattag cea a eericny enencear we meRENIS ' Ke : that driving and fresh air would be her— | would be glad to have her reduced to no alterna. | “The Hat,” which we here offer in an English | named Jane? ‘Dar’s colored oman heah by | into sweet womanhood, and Adelbert h | cvvtemm. The headache begins hous befnre the stensadh mung and embowered with roses that blossom | Mrs. Von Luitphen’s—ealvation. And #0 they | tive but marryingher percecutor, Aud with the | Vers ton: that name,’ says tho white man. Dat's whut he . They had wandered together thie same | Pe=mensick and the care of the stomach getting aie from June to January, and with honeysuckles | and so Maria, pitying her mother, and | powerful hand of @ great Senator against her, | MIse RN ScENR: A gentleman holding his hat, | said.” dearly. They had wandered together this ¢am- 1 4+ an in trom nervous sympathy transmitted from the that are green from one May to another, that | 2 ae Liat ee haa the right to aaprive how was she to contend anyway? ‘There sas ie payelh, yes! ou Tuesday last the knot was tled— |” ‘Is that all?” mer afternoon trom the matinee to the street | rain to the stomach. eS ee come May : er of sucl yment. went over and over | help; she was di: d fi F ard and fast; that cannot be den! “AN! Ain't d: 2 u a’ ri | car, and he had c1 be his 5 a ae ee Par es cee ae till at last it became unsupportable. She | not a hundred dollars ithe world; she ha not | 72 ess) Ema caged tree che tow ’e prise jot Rob hia tec koe anieaiades eet y | wariwarseee! to thie quastion: prepeltee ae suctoe HoScauas Wastes Meson eet manent: mae. o he pretty gardens always | could not bear any more to meet that man’s | been Oa i sto “Loo! ‘el 2 ce 7 = $2 back, and is to be found in poor and impower- Rave some bloom or other to show, and agrest | Slance; It made her feel like a worthless thing, | she ay or thee wae ony S erone wewocn Tu licceon teed Conia Godan eno can: | use convicgod in tile oourt, tome tne ago. of | He OF8 man whose whole nature was wrapped | ished condition of the nerve fui, and ‘den thin com linden is the haunt of multitudinous birds that oe , amma,” she said: ‘indeed I curt starvation for herself and her mother and her | Three hundied tranes made me amarried man’ | stealing a feather bed?” ? bal = Derren = oe eee oun | dition there are many local oF exciting caumes for theme ate as ; you see what he mea e 1s . riage i “Certainly, ; 5 side—that Myrtle poken the words w ’ merger make the air alive with song, and not a sparrow | tine to men co anne es ual mateiae with the man she loathed. Who would have thought tt! Married! How? | ge cents, Twas ‘victed when I’ "knowledge | which our story opens. She had watched him | Desdscbes such as faticue, overwork, right light. bot in the whole of them. And Maria Von Luitphen |” “and what if he does?” sald Mrs. Von Luit- | then her mother would drive her -alf wild with paseo “Then why do you come around here calling | SWsel¥ during ‘an acquaintance of nearly two | Sh mite without ten dal meet see fs never ashamed to take any of her few grand | phen. “I only wish he mizht. I haven't seen | her woes. And so she did fy Whe was ranked 8 Strict Cid tact people | Yourselta lady?” aan e | Zeus, and toticed with pain how he sedulonsly | Hows cher things sony tring on on stick, but 6le- acquaintatices to this little bower of a home that | 50 azreeable a man since your dear father —” The summer was already gone, and now Sep-| crammed’ “Well, yer see, when I stole de bed I was a | *olded candy stores and ice cream saloons. mioageedeiiggtintnne tad iadlereelimm ted a was only their gardener's in the days when Goy-| Mamma! mamma!” i tember crept away. October, with its magic | Infuse a kind of odor of the damned; single ‘oman. er fain pet .” she had said cure. It is DR. BENSON'S CELERY AND CHAMO- ernor Von Luitphen browsht his pictures and | ¢,AMd when I think of such a possibility—of | color in all the squares and on all the hills, | Lwho deciined—and gave lame reasons why— “Yes. = Plea | MILE PILLS, wivch are propared eayremly to and wil caap- | 2oUr taking your old place, of my living in the | wrapped the great white splendor of the Capitol | Hiv, sx, good comfortable matches; T “But now, sah, I'se a married lady.” tore like @ country horse at a fire e0- | cure all nervous ai Thousehold gear and horses, to Wasb- | old luxury. of Robert’s having the education | in its azure hazes, and veiled every long length | W29 every morning when I came to dress An appeal to the supreme court will no doubt And when the expected avowal came | “S si aveeeiae.. 3 ington, and lived eni himself at the top of | he needs—i feel as ifit were a leading of Provi- | of avenue oF Teach over the Potomac into the | Fouad iad one day more, and some Mains 1eS8} | ye taken Me cee ee ee Sats Mae wk Bones Atk ecumlte burned his candle at both ends, | dence.” Virinla shores, or up the Maryland slopes, with | peccgs auamuers slander and despise, ee ge erst hier veer paneer a] Nein mein carey lanl deme aad left nily the ashes. “Oh, mamm: all oe ar : th ah Set y A Kiss on the ‘. after Myrtle had rejected him, and walked swiff- | boxes for §1, or six boxes for $2.50, to any address, People pitied the Von Luitphens enormously | 4M yout : lstake supposing. there waa any sretevedners | os Seman Bovans sO | vomtie Paadehia Tine Jy toner the’ dry goods store which had beer when the of their aifars was known, But coe ee in such a lovely world. And every week of it | whey do von ask, came suclta thing about ? There is to be found much refreshment in a | *® jyrtipate as t0 secure hie rt eee ait a ome a while it was considered that Ides hocked at you. them nexces thee i a rhat pr ed me to dare al DI se ter! ernoon Adelbert stood moodily RK. BENSON'S nee. and a post there for Maris pro. | coiled as if it were a species of blasphemy. . Work, for pus | What made so great a chanze—a change like that? | acknowledges, though only a frank few have ld revenge himself on the nau girl who | NEW REMEDY AND FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION, ided for them amply; and then people forzot | ‘Mamma, you know he is. And as for mar- | s« Mihoee cwlipeccaueiteratiignt | ceetioe 1a eee Anat | the courage to acknowledge it openly. And it | bad wrecked his happiness. precisely 435 — bi but the few whom Maria loved | ?¥ing him, I would rather we all go to the poor- | learn were out of town: those who needed | A hat, in short, like all the hats you see— is a curious fact, yet unexplained by the philoso- | ©'Clock a ferce joy lighted up his counteaance, :. BENSON'S SKIN CU 1 not be forzotten by | house together.” nursery-maids were still out of town, too; there | 4 Plain silk stove-pipe hat. This did forme. | “| phers, that the slyer the kiss is the more there | 4: nuttIng on his hat, he left the store. wea eh geese Plea st ace! Gh We te Letra “The poor-house isa very disagreeable place,” in town, it se : DiSin Dink lise jus like tip ons thave ere, mn Fait ex G RRANTE] CURE meuiber long: full Of ‘distinc | whimpered ber mother, “Ison tad ever been [und teuble ened tO: Hes, But. want AGG? tein Jf of retreatment: ‘ of St. Agnes's Church were strik- | pbs peated thon) see; the whole personnel | there and seen the miserable wretches, some ot | __And now November had come, and was pass= Why, yea, A Kies that is paid asa forfeit befores whole ralig lehhy ap the steps | ES ee Eee ee ee there quently that presently | them with their feet doné up in rags, you | ing, and the winter would be along—and they 20“ But how? room full of people is prosaic, not to say znificent residence, and was soon seated as Gir asdan aca ’ ere cee ecmeeally) that wrens | cai think ‘helter of tie oer en tana | Met eT CTL tee eee ee Went, lend anear, | embarrassing. ‘The girl Iauzhs, ‘which spoils sumptuously fygnished parlor. The NS, DISEASES OF HAIR AND SCALP, ft in the town to pleasure Maria, What | house in Washington and an unlimited bank | ple, they could at any rate go out and pick coal | , OB€ 4ay this winter L went out to dine. the romance, and the fellow, ten to one, | prietor of the house, ¥ benevolent lookin: SCROFULA ULC TENDER TCH she was, to be sure! Her mother used | 8ccount.” from the railway and refuse heaps. All Was first-rate—the style, the food, the wine. _ | blushes—neither of them thinking much of it. | ntered the room. “Do you wish to 8, AND PIMPLES ON ALL PARTS - Te tariad ocin | “Well, mamma, we will end the matter. amma,” sald Maria at last,/“now you have | Ayoucert aiterward—en rege just so. and they both are apt pretty soon to forget ali | he said to Adelbert Tompkins—for it mare Neou_=with ber Galt head | Will never marry Senator Belfair. We are very time tO think it over, do you still really | My heels together. ‘Then I placed tev hag eat he yo liad sprang ligtitiy up the steps. Si aes Ob le SMe, eet and ne: ree crowned with its strai black | Well as we are, and we will stay so.” And she h me to marry that man whose baseness has | On something near, and jolned the Peed chat. But let the same fellow kiss the same girl] ‘*Yes,” he replied, “yonarethe person | seek.” | and freckles, and is the NEST TOILET 1 IN hair, with her biz I q turned, winding back into place a heavy lock of | reduced us to this strait?—the man who found | At half-past 8 we dined. " All weyt off well. Sirenene ey is ieeking. and the situation is'as)} “What would your” exid the ol THE WORLD. Elecantly put up, two bottles in one lexion like the cream and blush ofa tea-rose, | Net hair, and more beautiful than ever in her bas happy and well enough, and has brought this Trust me for being competent to tell! ferent as possible. That sort of a kiss, fired _ “You are the cashier in the package, Consisting of both internal aud external treat- e couches were never heard whirling alone | determination and resentment. ruin on us?” Her mother looked at the beauti- | 83% between two ladies—mute as fishes— lieve?” said the young man. ment. the avenues to the midnight e| “Oh, you selfish, you wicked, you ungrateful, | ful face 1 it rith care | With nothing else to do but count the dishes. Tan.” All first-class Drngyists have it. Price, $1 per pack- dnight festi that the y y 5 grateful, | ful face grown now so white and thin with care a i + er mothe ha ae cit aan HEE festivals, that the | oq) atcminable siti” cried her eeathene Tattos | Nad aorta oan Te Slee eg eaeeenim with. care | earned each teem in each course Dy heart. as cream. The taste of it sort “You have been stealing the concern's money. | #°- on loveliness of Maria were she « in| alll have done for you! To condemn me to | into tear eas Se Tron those iatiea. withes sober then’ commantly suggests the propriety or impro-| Do not sesk to deceive me. You are a cashlers | - my bail array—Maria in white sik with carnations; | Poverty and suffering, and your brother to ig-| “Oh, Maria, I thought it was for the be: T took a strong cigar iid kept my place. priety, as the case may be—of trying it again. | ‘tis enough. Give me $20,000 or I will expose T= LATEST NOVELTY FOR GENTLEMEN. Maria in pale rose with clouds of filmy lace; | 2oTance and toil—” she cried. “Y wanted you 0 to have everything | The concert. was announced for haif-past ten, And the laughing and blushing are exactly re-| you and ruin your life. Having heard me twit- Maria in delicatest sea-blue shading into green, |, And just then Senator Belfair confronted | you should. But he is dreadful, dreadful. He | AP at that hour I joined a crowd of men. Fersed. The fellow laughs without spoiling the | ter, you can chouse your own course.” JUST RECEIVED FROM PARIS. and dripping with jewels down the front, like} them, his ring not having been heard,and Maria | makes me shudder tothink of hun, Tnever want | 7HeMidles arm to arm. sweet, white, we found, | romaneo a bit, and the girl blushes like a pink | | For an insthnt the cashier did not move, and =o E abe c like) rend Rive wa . e is of Like rows of sugared almonds, round. carnation. then, going to an elegant escritoi gown Earl Doorm would have had Enid | iced him, with her fallen hair and the stain on | to see his face again. Tibghod cont . going to an elegant escritoine which stood . Maria in ail impossible splendor, Tt never | er cheek and the glory in her eyes. “Oh, mamma! mainma!” she exclaimed, half | A'stout fierce gentleman, gos up with care Tt is queer that the very same thing should, | ina corer of the room, he wrote a check for i iia occurred to her that Marialooker it aa chara: | _.You must pardon me," eald he then, gently, | laughing and halt crying, cit te better thane | (Aces Leet ne aoe abo under such slightly altered circumstances, be 80 | €50,000, certified it, and handed the piece of pa- ing in her white print sprinkled with tiny roses | “if, coming in, I could not help overhearing | fortune to hear you say so. Now, at least, we | L¢aned on the other door-post, hard by me, Seria clnerent, Bor 18 Ht any the less. quser)} per, mows fortune, to the youth. TO BE WORN WITH FULL DRESS. as she could have lookes in velvets. part of your conversation. My dear girl,” and | are of one mind aain,and we caa die in as Whilst far off in the distance Some poor gift ecause the difference has existed from the ear- “I have but one favor to ask,” he said, “and But such thousts did not vex the girl any, if | Re took Marla’s lifeless handy “when have I | and love tovether if heed be.” end ene ies iO Gen eit tte CUP OF Cay Bestane of the wore Sons He ae oe sill muarey any Gaugtier, oF SIX DIFFERENT STYLES. they did her mother. She was content enouzh | talked of marrying you? — Wait till [do before | “I don’t want to die,” sobbed Mrs. Von Luit- | ome Arashy stuf of love and love's distress, D TENURE OpIOREIUE: Wouldn't like to let as sure a thing ae you are = pif tes ‘dollary a sok uel ses taee tee | iss sar child hae warmer toe eee rekea T aon sven tueried pebble, “x eull| ese ee ee What the Postmaster General Sa: Own right, and wih Iam dead and the bank aa ee the same work for twice the money. For she | back to it the tender memories of days that are | open shells in Oyster Bay first;” and Marie | Next a dress coat of fashionable make ‘About It. | directors are in jail on account of my bookkeep- 7 : Femembered unfailingly the consternation of | ons lost in the past.” smiled sadly to look at his little weak white | Cime forward and began: It clad a poet. Postmaster General J i Ing, it will suffice to keep you in comfort.” es that time before they knew which way to look, | _ It was very adroit. What could Maria do? | hands that never had been good for anything, | {2203 the last mode in Paris. Did you know it? eter samee, fous enual te i ee eee ee with debts to pay, and life to live, and little | He had begged her to take the place of a lost | and then cried to think of it. i) cro cata vont eens aeurooeia muse Ports hae {iis to say on the tenure of office of] | Two months later Myrtle Mahaily, the eash- | ——__TW0S_PENNSYEVANIA_AYF3 — Robert to be educated. Now and then some of | @2uzhter. and he was wonderfully Kind:and she | It was while she waa crying and trying her | Recited with stm gestures: ond byenhag the Post Office clerks and other servants: ler's only child. became Adelbert’s bonny bride. = the old friends picked her up in the street and | Pitied him a little to think he was so helplessly | best to check it that Robbie ran, the door-bell | By some one borrowed trom the great Francais. “Some method of relief must be provided | One child, a blue-eyed boy with golden hair, | SWEET CIDER! SWEET CIDER! took her home in their landaus; and now and | 'ePulsive. Plainly there was nothing else but to | ringing, to usher in upon her, with her. bri from the overwhelming pressure for appoint-| has blessed the union, and as he sits on_ his then some one would have her and her mother | let him come when he would and listen to her | ming eyes and dishevelled hair, a spare, dark | jj DUsh to Write tt—poems, you must know, ment to clerkships and other subordinate posi- | £tandfather’s knee in front of the | fire, to dine, and perhaps twice a year insist on tak- | Singing, and drive with him on sunny after-| gentleman in long cassock—Father Bianchi. | AU Ske me Sleepy; and It was so now. tions and from the equal pressure for the re- | and asks in his innocent, childish way if “papa OF SUPERIOR QUALITY ing her to the opera or to a reception, and pride | 200N8, and wonder what satisfaction he found | He had a roll of music under his arm and after | Of the sthooth linea I felt yas tlds droop d moval of capable and experienced assistants to | isn'ta smart man,” the old gentleman kisses themselves on their virtue for doing it. It was | i the society of one so silent and distrait as | an abrupt word ortwoof srecting,he openedand | Ahd a strange torpor Teould nor ignore» ~—_| make room for those who are not more compe- | iin fondly and says in soft, tow tones: not a mail whirl of dissipation, but it was more | She, and go with him, under her mother's | spread itonthe piano rack in @ business-like | Came creeping o'er me. tent. The public service is a public trust to| ‘You're singing on the right keynow, sonny.” In store and for ale in Barrels or Regu by than she wanted: for even the enjoyment of it | Charge, to the theater, and feel that it was | way, struck a few chords, and called her to his * Heavens! suppose I snore! which every citizen may properly aspire, and “Whe Modern Prim 1 ail and the sizht of her old world did not com- | Wholly reprehensible in her, but that she dis-| side. “I have need of a soprano to-day,” he | Lt me get out,” I cried, “or else—” the public ‘interest plainly demands that ad-| ». ~~ a Re fetsate for the wounds pride suifered at the | Hed him more every day. said, without any circamlocution.. “It is St. | yeast my eyes around to nna my Watt tt mission to it should not depend upon personal | E*#eBe Field in Denver Tribune, SAM'L C. PALMER, ids of dresses made over till she knew every | _When he sat in the low chair and gazed at her, | Cecilia’s Day. We will see what we can do in 8 neanbaun favor, because such favor cannot well be im- 2 " serap in them: by heart. as she sang with her delicious voice, so modu- | her honor.” And the room never echoed to | ‘The console where I laid {t down, alast partial, and because a system of appointment | The Boy is Sitting Down eating Jam. Deror 12% 29ru Stu It was on one of these occasions, when old | lated to the little room that one hardly dreamed | such music as that singing while Maria | Was now surrounded (not a mouse could pass) yy mere influence may be readily per-| His Mamma is coming throuzh the Door. The saad General Shurtiei? had stopped her on her way | its power, it grew beyond endurance for her to |lifted up her heart and _goul | BY triple rows of ladies gayly dressed, verted to the promotion of private interests | Boy will stand up the Next bowl of Jam he 2 vel his ‘zaze gloating over her; and when|in her suddenly hopeful voice, for once | W20 fanned and listened calmly, undistressed. | and personal ambition. Appomtment by influ- | Bats. WEST WASHINGTON. frst eyed : pone nro Co ay roads round the | hardly at all abashed by the drill-master who ae that fair crowd could work his ence naturally results in making the tenure 1. = Shurtleff had embraced her in | Soldiers’ Home, and meeting the eyes of one | declared this passage taken wrong, and that | Rank vakind rank rose heads in bright array. of office depend not upon fidelity and efficiency | Here we Have a Game of Croquet. Henry | _§® Truxrnoxre Coxsrerion. ow the carriaze and the dark, and thrown aswan’s- | 89d another Unconscious of the danhterly | without expression, and tie other a travesty of | Diamonds "were there, and Howes ands iower | in the discharve of official duty, but upon the | has just Mit Nellie with a Mallet, and Nellie ip ji ae ze mantle around her lest she should take | compact, with something in them testifying | the writers meaninfe, But alter on how o cate Bt assiduous cultivation of the favor of a patron. | calling Henry nanghty Names. ‘Their Mother | (VARPETS, CARPETS, CARPETS. ‘and half t to th different view of the matter, she would | gathered on Father Bianchi’s dark face, and he | Such lovely shoulders! Not the smallest thrin | Such a tenure is incompatible with the self- | is not Much of a Croquet player, but ina minute | VU, i leclare to herself that she could never go out | put hismusic into the ease again. “That is weil,” | TheY Yalsed in me. My thoughts were of my hat. | respect of the incumbent, and the service must | she will Come out aud Beat them Both. NEW LINE OF INGRAINS JUST RECEIVED. with him again. Once. at her mother's urgency, | he said; ‘on the whole, well. Youare the so- | 1412¥ beyond where all those ladies sat, necessarily suffer from the decline of its morale. " . ire they dined with him at Welcker'’s, and prano of St. Cecilia's choir. You will be ready | SndGh,? Gndelabrumy shiny, bright, But the evil consequences cannot be limited to am : crimson did not leave her fuee for_a week; | for evening service at the choral festival to- | Whilst 1, far off With yearuing glances tiga” | the public service; they effect all political action, | ; Anya Kune. et ae tant aa? peeaHly, | Several handsome SMYRNA CARPETS, which wean before, and | although everything had been so perfect, even | night. Ihave meant to make it an offering of | Whether L could hot lure it to mg side. the purity and vigor of the government, and | 00 Rot Know. Let us Find ont. Put the | oe cinest VERY LOW PRICE: her heart had. beaten | t@ the presence of a presidential candidate and | song beyond all others in the land. We. have the national character itself. The question, | GUn,0n the table and you. Susie, blow down Sm Rider and wiluer, and the color had burned | a8 English carts daughter with him atthe | been preparing for it this six weeks, and to-day | AUP my Oe hand not putter on my head, | therefore, is one of far bisher importance than | One Bartel. while you’ Charlie, blow Down the | RUGS, MATS, DEUGGETS, s and deeper on her cheek, till it i le dinner, she had re:rarded herselfas a Geor- | I feared all f inci salle Gua SU vali, rooms 2 fondly seta. that of the rative or Sain Bee hean al a Co ‘ ven ERY GOO! a damask rose’ in the sun. If was not alto, ; {ian gitl ina slave market. ‘Then, gain, fo | must sing It again. belore. hight. ia ‘company | osha deat hab to.a magnetic throb, * employment of the ‘government, cal” mate | 2cunie, and pick Up Susie's head and Charlie's | VACE CURTAINS and FINE UPHOLSTERY GOODA om oO ; ras quite as | 5 ake |“ But w is the other soprano?” asked Ma- | Escape. We'll find no poetry at home.” itutions. The first step, my judg- i : in all the newest designs at mueh the personality of the prima donna, | her up to the Senate and put her in the diplo— | ria, timidly. ment, toward the relief of the appointing office: IV. Who seemed to her to wear the air of some | ™atic gallery, as it no other were good enough, My soprano and my tenor have been dis- | S24,2!! the while did that dull poem creep and the promotion of the greater efficiency and |, The Girl has pretty Eyes and Red Lips. She SINGLETON & HOEKT'S, dinavian goddess, to be no less than | i serrante would | bring trays of dainties—a missed,” said Father Bianchi. “I do not at all preanly Ce ee economy of the civil service would be a method se Going ica hed panied Lit Glen | nit 801 MARKET SPA\ hing almost unprecedented in the dignified gal- | require my singers to worship with me: but I do |} i ? of minor appointment which should be inde- | Where the Cricket chirps in the Hedge and the | = ca : x | Teries of the first assemblage of the world to | require that they shall not hinder others from |e come, my hat—fresh airt | Pendagf of personal or partisan influence. In | Jiszers playin the Grass. peregrine ded | (Satara lodies of the opera there yan in | her and Mrs. Shurtleff, if it happened to be Mra. | worshipping with me by their secular conduct. | My darling, let us both get out together. some important government offices, of which 1 | Walk in the Glen, too. He will Meet the Girl |“ iy Sncetstnee oor Wl ances her mind some hint or memory of the mystical | Shurtletf, or to her and her mother, if it hap- | I have replaced my tenor. T haveinquired about | Here all is hot and close: outside, the weather | have had personal knowiedie, such a system ig | 88d they will Talk about the Weather. | We | of ail the new dmkus tu Carpet eau ¢ Ma Walhalla music. and the ride of the Valkyrian | Pened to be her mother sitting there and preen- | you. You will surely sing with a devout spi Is simply perfect, and the pavement’s dry. already in operation. In those offices tninor | Weuldn't Give a Cent for that Piece of Court | Watons Axminster Moyuction Bietiov, Duly, Brass ters. not hindering the sweet tunes, but add- | mg and pluming herself as the possible mother | You have something to be thankful for. The | Gomes Come, my hat— one effort! Do but try. appointments are determined solely by proper | Paster on the Girl’s chin by the Time the Girl | 1s, Tapestry and Ingrains, Smyrna Carpets, Rage and ing to their power, and giving to them, as it | oFome of those dignitaries below. | But it_only talary is not equal to that of your late. desic in | Sect thoughts the silence and sort inoon Will stir | qualifications, ascertained by Impartial’ tests | Kets Back home. yy a ef, AN AGIA anil atmeaphere of Chance er to see the baldheadea men turning | the Treasury; but the position will bring. y : open to all applicants upon equal i v. Linoleum in mew desiens.” Coton Mate all sizek. loot Kind For music was the passion of her life, | and adjusting thelr glasses to admire her, and | pupils in singing that will double It, I will see Mereavolee cHe4: yp, | great success which hasattended this method of Id reed area eee oo gy ey ienireeore ny a thing e gone Without to save ing fair as a sly dog. toit. Have you done staring at my daughter yet? selection proves its practicability, while the | Children. Run Quick and put your Little, Fat | Chvice patterns. “Purchasers will find dt to thelr money ehough for the purchase of the sheets | Yet by one device and another her repug-|_ ADdif Senator Belfair was among the throng | BY Jovel sir.” x good results, both in the service and in the char- | hands in it. Merey me, your Hands are as | vantage to examine our Stock. iS ae Wiee: Ueutiesk whemr abo Meant it canis cod |mance. was, Kepe freee Get eci te oe fo | inthe erent chrureh thab Gighe llstonins Cen My astonished glance here met | acter of the officers thus. selected. demonstrate | Bltek as tie Coal Hod now! Hark, Mamma is HOO, BRO. & CO. when she {ried to sing it herself, fed her soul as | Shurtlef and her mother and the kindly old | Music at the choral festival of St. Cecilia's, as | Tuya met quill botore bls look severe, Its value. ‘The extension of this method under | Coting. She will Spank you when she Finds | _ol 1398 F STREET. EAS EOSITT HOUSE. meat and drink feed another. general; she was fairly beleaguered, and felt | that sweet silvery voice threw forth its throb- | But sald politely, OX Sever uniform conditions is earnestly to be desired, | Your Hands so Dirty: Better go and Rub the 5s eee hewn oe a Senator when Les bore wild ee ae bay. “Those were Sena- Bing cones in a oats jot vamp nd thanks, oe = 2 , “Pardon, sir, but I pret coe : niliar evils in the public s eae Dirt off on the Wail Paper before she GAMUEL 8. SHEDD, . E wrgot his existence the | tor Belfair’s wor ut these were Senator Bel- inust have felt that Maria Von Luitphen had not so much as know her.” — vice itself and to remove the still graver evils . Rext moment, and when the curtain rang up, | fair’s looks and acts. Was a trap closing round | & toils forever, and was as far removed “wnat, sir! Why, | which spring from them. In my opinion the ie ordiensl ae ae ines ta edt dhe ects ce os | hee Sk ce Cee closit = RENE ach ee oe Oe yonder, str, beside that table, sate peneral principles govern the selec- | CLBTS Louise Mellogg’s Persistent Lover | yorrs sTaR FURKAC * he inetiable spell of the sweet | instead of drivins from the Capitol after these | | ren. stan put, sir—” ment. The pu ‘ed. by honest, ex- Ae aw sai ie sone in senor © = = And, MOTTS | ST. GEORGE ELEVATED OVER music. the sorrow and an:uish an uty of | little triumphs of his, they wa:ked, eacounter- ETRE SIRIDEaN i “J don’t suppose | Perienced and competent officers; and changes, | !!8! Social circles in Chicago, Miss Clara Louise INGE, (a first-class Heating and Cooxing Range.) + : ssa white rose, not adamask, | Ig half the town; and then not all the beauty A Large Catch of Striped Bass. Yousneaivto tell me—7) 'PPOS | therefore, shouid be made carefully and only for | Kellogg will very shortly withdraw from public ‘Always on hand stock of rc F the swan'sdown man: | of broad avenues and enchanting skies, not t ie aa May eeaordianty ae of elped ies “Really” a nutxnows Re eee official conduct. My, views | appearances and play a star engazement to an BAe Trdare LAG s down these : i$. mon q ject are the result o re : , sHTS, 5 » tears welling up and quive those, not Arlington sitting on ite helenae sue | Blackford Fishing company, of Montauk Polat, | Zour Nay of dealing with young tndtes, sir? official experience, and I am persuaded that the [ome noe OF one—in other words, that Miss Kel-] 5 ise and Tuning ond all Minds of Scthing the shive:ei aust throbbed with the excitement | the Monumeng, with the sun shining throush | Lous Island. Some 4b coon te: at dah ovat | euteatnges Tiling, if you please, with her.” practical application of these prineiples would | Os Is soon to be married and retire fromthe | promptly done and at fair prices. aud delizit and woe. And lusking at her the | the fag that blazed atop en sens, through | Long Island. Some 4,000 pounds of flsh were 8" yes, sir. You know you've jiited five, | Promote public morality, increase the economy | Concert stage forever. Her betrothal is a fact cant. & Rene, * | Ro the pletureof the Treasury faeade-—nothing, captured, the lazer proportion ofthe fish weigh | Every one knows tevety mn alive." and eicieney of the publieservice and assauage | well known among her friends here, the happy hs 5s Kan eee tense J ‘@ strain | in fact. closed her eyes to the view of her own | 22 a ay e y | “Allow me—” the fury of party spirit, against which Wash- | (or, as it appears, the unhappy) man being a ——— = ——! : = nud then be laughed to find | degradation if she took another step beside that more See ee nee oe meajouty of Your reputations a cei str Every father knows | ington warned the puch as ief peril Whitney, pee thy and wel ee stock mone SE ‘AL SACQUES, ewias poetical. But he told the gen- | man. ' ® fish were females, their ezgs_not being ma- | Your reputation, damaging to-those see ator in New York. For a long time past he has | G ©: ES, eral nexi day that Mrs. Shurtle must take him | Yet. as the spring was deepening, she often | (urna. In the stomach of one of them a whole | WRO—" (a. aoa Earthquakes Expected in Nevada, | pressed the fair diva to name the day, but she FUR-LINED CIRCULARS, FANCY FUPS, that enchanting ereature, and help | Went on long walks by herself after office hours | °! nackerel was found, and a great > z . From the Vincinia (Nev.) Enterprise, Nov. 10. has with equal persistence opposed his urgency, hima meske ter ifr Helfair and the mistress ot | to avold the prosecutor atthe time of his usual | wany Were found to have. been feeding on eels. | stare nate an nour in mg date you in this place | yy sharp earthquake shocks were felt here | evidently thing reluctant te close her brilliant | SEAL CAPS, FUR GLOVES, CARRIAGE ROBES, r How could he Know that In that | coming, And many a time, when her thoughts | Such @ catch in this particular locality has not | “Saprist, mousieurt I'protest--1 swear yesterday morning at 10:10 o'clock. In brick | public career in the zenith of its success, HATS AND CAPS were all fu Geman sla Genta aig ies nown for a number of years.” Usually, | Tnever looked at her.” ijaitdaniral: Chelahiocienw ere anol srely felt, |. Finding persuasion of no avail, Mr. Whitney open chureh_on her’ way and sit-down in the | the advent of the larger or adutt fish is followed “Indeed! What were s © more severely felt, | was adopted a system of mild coercion, which iy caer vanes, eS shadow till the quiet seemed to fall upon her by a school of smalier bass, and some 10 years | You looking at, then?” and caused good deal of alarm. They came 3 “4 ¢ Miss Kellogg in all h ‘ x General Shurtleff. however. never refused any | like a mantle, and she could Ther wr T | aio about 8,000 pounds of small fish were taken ‘ “Sir, I'll tell you that— | from the southward, and were felt at Carson ro teael Sipe ae ing =F sé lo; ‘cd in al t “4 GENTS, YOUTHS AND CHILDREN, one a favor, and Mrs. Shurtieff had the wont, | Often she pansed ou the threshold of St, Cesiligs | 862 sinzle haul. ‘There is a law placing a limit | MY Bat, str. “Morbleu! looking at your hat!” ee efore they reached this place. We | Tice not dail’ disugreeable to. the. lady, ae sep eee Sens cleedanbiad, eeaceut oy ets | ki eames ie, oF stele tip ieee 42'3 | on the size of striped bass which can be placed | yes, sir, it was my haces oO yourhatt” | are likely to have another earthquake this win- | elf mot at all disacreeable to | the lady, ae and thor fate was coing to be good to| choir practi Teo at ee Me, the | on sale in this market, which provides that. the clined: My color rose: ter. The shocks have commenced in the same | Sich ig just @ trifle awkward rgd See Maria, and the Von Luitphens were going to| aad where the yoice of an acquaintance | 2s! Must not weigh less than one-half pound. | He angered me, this man who would suppose way and at about the same season that they did s beence in New Y KNIGHTS TEMPLAR REGALIA, take their old place ain, and Maria was to | Of hers used to” send. its soft and rich | ZlesTeatest waste took place in former years, | I thought of nothing but his gi. some years ago when we were shaken up al- cumstances-_namely, the abeonoe in Now York, Sinuaamaihe have the fortune she was to become so finely. | contralto tones through riped bass a few inches long having been fre- Meantime aily for about 6 months. Yesterday | Ww; i * iv. oush the arches of | quently sold. When i ‘The black coat maundered on in dreary rhyme. morning the shocks were n. ’ With that faithful chaperon at her post, it would wht of that. One | the empty place—empty thee, but so freque q ly sold. hen it is considered that these | poy. 3: pote ete spe a z sho not only felt in brick leasant ve IN GREAT VARIETY. ‘ at dan estabil Fann | eed with oy Dridal parties, ee 4 Aperinee wl crow Tere ee MD mounds ete Exe angel Se cine an eee both to- persns" residing ta frame ‘bulngs by A big ts costant attensance it or errocteant: at) DUNLAP& CO.'S SILK, DERBY AND OPERA HATS, © proud position Senator suited well. n, too, she i : i : . ther, sa eS So win stand, v : name—th s wh fe whie! = 2 e ce N ork all through this | “It was my daughter, sir.” ng G A vestern derwesherpeai A) Slid weuid have bee oc Mien poate rhs ei ee year, aud these fish seem to have been rare all | a. oh yeaiq {No Sir—my hat.” | Part of the town, is said to have moved some fe tare ene aypoery at her MES VIS’ SON! ] deen so forward and eo unmatdenly as to speak | When she found it was Father Bianchi, himself | Sone the New England coast. ‘The United | oer een eee a or ee cent ie mae ett: Another wizzle would | concert engazements and go to the altar sag laa ity aad au tmpossiblity, so. why talk of | aneht, who hadisuch a wonderful name for the lieve that there wil be no roubie in procuring | yout gt my can {then detore the worldsastir | | atavoc Among Noble Trees. whe’ Abdent lover had been in Chicago during | A BT GALLERY, 008 i = i fecundating, and hatching he eggs. Sl “Pl be ready, sir.” e London News. B t ¥ t t chiens old fellow, with a shining fore- i me idea the songs of cherubim'and | {St #5 ing ene roan wat tte cage Btiould T'll be ready, sir. Some interesting statistics as to the destruc- | Miss Kellogg’s engagement this week and last, ‘NO. 521 7TH ST. N.W., BETWEEN E AND F, itt ran up and over inte the nape of his | Seraphim would not be complete without him. | fectea hea he eeeoe * New York: atets | ,A pretty quarrel! Don’t you think tt sor and In a good humored way announces his inten: 3. F. SPELSHOUSE heck, aman who eared for a good dinner ace | It was heavenly old music they were singing | cd by MF. Mather for a New York state | ,APmUy quant, Dont yon tank ts tion of trees in the October hurricane have just | tion to keep up the exeursion as long as she does. PAPER HANGER AND DECORATO! did for his life, and whose servants had now and | Under his dircetion, though, written by men | pst_hatching Les ke cae by the fish com- : been published by the Journal of Forestry. In| It is said that a day or two azo Miss Kellogg Pg er pt tr = het Klin te Wea eas ae coe with Heaven and its worship in their souls; and | missioners, ‘strip ass Will undoubtedly be | Black coat had finished. All the audience made | Berkshire alone no less than 2,000 trees have | Was describing her predicament to Mrs. Herbert og y = FA fetes : Y raised, and the young fish. will then be intro- ve toward tee and lemonade. ously ? = rraghetec at : ‘eo he ‘or, which mai her | listening to it. and joining in it with her fresh | duced’ into the waters of the state-—N. y- was clear; Iny way Was open now; ly injured. Old elms, beeches, | Ayer, of this city, who is one of her intimate latest desicns Picture’ Frames than president—a man 0 : | voice when she dared, always left her in peace. | Tynes, Now. 20 NX" | sty nat was mine. d made my fora bow, thorns, and birehes have suffered severely; but | and confidential friends. After listening to the | and ' ‘ and what was past cure in him, Maria must | People were going from the city by this, how. Da re aie en eae eS And hastened, fast as lover could have moved, English oaks form nearly one-third of the total | recital, Mrs. Ayres exclaimed: “Weil, why don’t | Rowtues it th on he endure for the sake of what was past reach for | €Yer. the Shurtleffs at last among the rest. Con- | Some Vulgarities of “Good Soctery.» | Turotgit trailing tains, toward te dear ting X | Humber thrown down or badly broken. “In the | You bfeak off your encasement at once and | {iucs, “Aiur ination ot my stork othe: ; ° ress had adjourned late in the July heats, But | prom the Queene ae ol BOE ICES Veta ie (ruin was even more) | cpatry Mine/ he SpLCKOi pean Aone . Shurtleff lost no time in taking Senator | NOt Senator Belfair; he still remained Bl |e ape tie private’end sereonat!te one [2 ee eee aes serious. It is computed that some 4,000 were | that this might be done were it not for being a“ and had the mother | Horses came praucing to the door every night, “ is ques PI pel , is one You arein scarchat” ‘Here's the hat, I think, | injured in the parks and pleasure-grounds at | aWay from home, and not liking to be married | Branch Store Bio, F08 Teh a Dew cr to dine with him a few days | And how could she refuse her mother the relief vulgar habit, and telling your own business, % Shapely, soft, and pink, | Alnwick. In that part of Sherwood which is | in a hotel. “Oh, dear,” said hersprightly friend, Velvet, 250. up. When the dey ate amazement and diszust, | of fresh and blowing air outside the furnace of | Which no one wants to hear, is another. Ask- | 4 lovely arm, a perfect arm, held out called Birklands, the havoc among the fine old | “We can arrange that easily enough. Just come | Cart nn a pity ag Gt the day after the dinner. Mrs. Yon Luit~| the city? ing the cost of a present that has been made to | My precious’ hut. Impelied by Sudden doub | oaks and birches has been almost unexampled, | to our house and be married right off.” Window Bhades aud’ Fixtures, 000. 18-3 Phen made her duty call, and she opened to her | __ It was when they left the carriage, darkness p I 'ralsed my eyea Pink ribbons trimmed her | while the young plantations at Thoresby haye | That this offer involved a wedding on her daughter'sadvancement, the | having come on as they drove, one moonless by way of parting vail; loud talking | ,, ress. fortunately suffered but little. At Welbeck the | a8 brilliant a scale as she could desire, Miss Kel- © lady openly rebelled, declared | Bight, Mrs. Von Luitphen preceding them to the hard staring at table; insolent disre- | “Here, monsteur, take it. "Twas not hard to/ Spanish chestnut trees have been laid low by | logg well knew, and it was plain that she was that she would sooner see Maria in her grave | arden seats, that Maria’s muslin scarf caught | pect to husband, wife, sister or brother; show- | what" mad x regiments, and the poplars have been terribly | Strongly tempted to avall herself of the gener- than the wile of such an animal as Senator el- | In the gate, and she staid to loosen it, only to | ix temper In triiles and making scenes in pub- Me gor” You look this way. You longed | thinned, as well as the oaks. At Stamford the | OWS proposition. So stands the, matter at pres- ir find the Senator's arms about her, and his breath | Iie: showing an embarrassing amount of fond- | You were 80 sleepy, nodding—see!—just 80. famous lime tree, said to have been planted by | ent, and it is thought not at all unlikely that SEAL SACQUES, FUR-LINED WRAPS. ‘or a moment Mrs. Shurtleff had the best her face. Ina moment she had torn her. | Ress and making love in. public; covert sneers, | Ah, how I wished to help you, if Lcouldl Queen Elizabeth during one of her many visiés | Mr. Whitney will be rewarded for his patience f mind in the world to Zt Maria zo to her erect searf and all, and turned on him | of which people can see the animus if they do | Linleht have passed {t possibly. 1 would to Burleigh, hasbeen almost completely wrecked. | and his pestering at no distant day. Indeed, Kangest stock in thoctiy. Towest petoos. aon of her, and she sat in a vexed silence. | itat th k. “I Know I promised you, ot a understand the drift; persistent ego- re clea by ladies’s chain, from hand tohand, |The trunk was divided into four parts about | Miss Kellogg's friends here are quite confident STINEMETZ, at id not take her long to retlect that | she heard him saying. “But it is too much for | tism, which talks forever of itself, itself, itself. | Trot atthe teil cOa ree eee seven feet from the ground, each of the divisions | that such will be the outcome, and declare they 1937 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. & gosling is a eygnet, and that -™¢. Lcannot pretend any longer. I laye you. | only itself, and cannot even feign the most pass- | Fortear they mnieht cue khi p: being as large as an ordinary tree. Three of | Wouldn't be surprised if it alm ar oe Mrs. Von Luitphen would have wel- | You twust be my wife.” s ing interest in another; detraction of friends | Tam too prone te talke Pin Kee we? | these have been torn away, leaving only the | day within a week or two. gomed the Archangel Michael, had he come ever!” she cried, passtonately—“never! | and it may be of relations—a husband telling of | Take it ‘Goodnight? |) SePNe You. smallest one and some smail branches remain- ? aughter, with much the same | never! Twill die first!” Andshesprang | his wife's unpleasantness, a wife complaining of | Sweet angel, pure and truet | ing. At ufford some fine elms were uprooted: MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER. And She herself had ¥ t him and into the house, forgetting that so | ber husband's faults; the bold assun 'y looks to their real cause she could refer, but perhaps on no demesne, except Ainwick and | From the Bombay Gazette. 25 CENTS A PACKAGE. Maria, and if her own wother chose to stand in | "uch demonstration was unnecessary periority; and the servile convession of infinite | AD4 never thougnt one glance was meant for her. | Weibeck, has such damage been done as at| Arelizious mendicant of the Jain cast has just 2, REO S oaramaracy, girs Might, she would espouse her cause. ou're a trump, Mia,” said Robbie, follow- | unworthiness; all these are signs and evidences | on, simple trust, pure trom dubasing wilest Worksop Manor. At Worksop and Clumber, | completed a ninety-one day's fast at Pablanpur. | 95 MSS Oth atrces waediwest, She should not be hindered of state and opu- | Iz her, inss his frst opinion inthe mat- | of vulzarity—vulgarity of a far worse type than | Itook my hat from her fair hands with smiles, __| Which, like Welbeck, are among the ““dukeries” | an eye witness describes in a Surat paper the . I ¥ ANY Such triy ences. | idn’t marry him if ke was made of | that which eats its fish with a steel knife, and | And hurrying back, sought out my whilom f carved out of that ‘anclest forest, which once of Ww. WREATLEY'S And always ready for a windmill to dt, Mex, | £04, and dou't you." "And Itobbie was ‘all the sass and “each of the men were. Exclaimin, z °°) | extended from Nottingham ‘almost to Doncaster | 8PPearance of the man on the genttradesitesd . ew Bhurtlesf addressed herseif to the contest, called Comfort she had for many a day tiereaner, be. | _ In fact, true vulzarity resolves itselfinto that “Tear me, sir. BeforeTgo, | the trees came crashing down In every direction, the A AND WET_AND DRY all her powers about her. and before Mrs. Von | tween her mother’s reproachings and bescech- | Central point of evil—selfishness. The unselfish | F¢Me explain. You, sir, were fn the right, the Spanish chestnuts, oaks, and birches suffer- SCOURING ESTABLISHMENT. had concluded lier call had convinced | NZS, Weepings and wailings, and her old lover's | an never be really vulgar. They may be un- | vayno\ny hat attracted me to-night, inig most severely. ‘The shade of Dr. Johnson | been call for and deliver WORK anywher» in the Dig her that ® match with Senator Beifair was the | #ubuscades, from which he surprived her at any | couth, but they cannot be more; while the best | | love your daughter std peeeey oe eee would smile at a report of the damage done to CEE oe greatest in the country; that it would confound | SdUare or comer as she went to and from her | top-dressing of manner to befound in the whole | “You, Sir” isillaeges es cas frees in Scotland, but it is nevertheless true | the fast, ee a, those people who had dropped them and | desk inthe hot mornings and afternoons, and | World cannot make the substance refined, where He turned his big round eyes on me, | that some 1,500 were blown down on the Glamis * them by in their poverty, that it would | insisted on walking beside her, as it he would | that one foul canker of egotism and indifference | Then held his hand out. ie. ‘The greatest disaster of all oc- zoteseate poor os sheet rank that was hers, that | Lav & — a he [ajo ithouh she | to others ties at the heart of things. “ Well, well, we will see.” he estates, would educate Robbie, and give him a’start | Would not glance at him or speak with tim, ee eee Kea. . fn the world. and that it would pa ole Atlenzth one afternoon she succeeded in| pls, VACCINATION A Paavesrive or Swarr | Nextday ye talked. Thats how tt came about, jousands years to her own life: that, when all was sud, | going the whole way home without meeting | POX?—The health departwent of St. Louis has | it was last as I sald; an@even mach losses cannot be awit ‘cardled BOYS CLOTHING HOUSE, and to be plain about it, Senator Belfair, with | him; nor did she see him the Next day, or the | been earnestly considering the quession, Is vae- | Aad, she’s an angel, and my home is—heaven, Ris habits, was not likely to live very long to| next. Senator Belfair had given up the’ matter | (uation @ preventive of small-pox? con- | Her tather, mild in spite of miensevere, Plague Maria. and she could bear witi: him for | and left town, she said; and more light-hearted | C™sion arrived at Is an emphatic affirmative. | Holds a high office—is no cul . 909 PEXMerLvaxtA AVENUE ‘@ few years for the sake of her own fnterest; | than Sinbad when he escaped the Old Man of | OU¢ firm basis for this belief is the fact that not | Besides—a boon few brid spac a JAY GOULD ’ |, bad, or indifferent, if she didn’t | the Sea—sinee she had always feared the Sidaaky srom, small urred He ae widower—s0—you Undery she would marcy some Treasury | atom inthe world that she inizht yield—she | “tY for five years, Now all this’ along on the precarious footing | tripped along on her way to the Treasaty on the | 280102 pa nea upre Kenerally practiced, than, | By thisstik hat L year, with a crisis every fourth year | morning of fhe dey Cia aie came Oo this joyous | Purine inst year al Farge ily ln ibe “cousitry. | Cr ty ts rete a (ged yanccrey tatcagr lr ay Ap ead Pog ona loeaiieer selteonees teeta $0 deaths ait in. Chicago 3, ‘rom amal-pox Many, with vind = Ain 2 eather gs 4 jubbed the “ stove-pipe,” onl it was desirable—that love was but a| The fear of defeat was qone; tempt St. Louis has certainly enjoyed. therefore, an | U8¥®; 3 pagent rd site Re dlgped temptation was | enviable immunity from the: ee or two @ woman who wide ta be about as happr receiving the t i Fe 3 4 ft bt bi

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