Evening Star Newspaper, January 31, 1891, Page 7

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7 SHALL HE MARRY HER? | sists s:s2s, TeSotal hoster soe SN RO ne Raa (dem ———— ee S pe fay and took pg pigs ta you in Something About the Celebration to Be Trout Just at Present. mea HE FISH COMMISSION 18 DOING ITS| William Downey is the grand old man of GREATEST INTEREST IS FELT BY | I yest just now to make the streams of the | photographers in Englend, says the Pai Mail inventors all over the country in the ap-| country swarm with trout. Three times as s Proaching celebration of = patent centennial | many trout are being distributed this vear over | He began to practice his profession nearly here in Washington. Its most important feat- the United States as were propagated last year. | forty years ago, and during that long period ure will be the formation of «national 980- | Two new trout stations have been started—one | he has photographed emperors and emprrenca, aise | “lation, expected to include not less than 10,000 | a¢ Neosho, Mo., and the other at Leadville, Col. | kings and queens, eultans, princes of the he members, which will hold in view as its chief ; s , best “st a. tef | The latter ‘ely to be in the future the most | princesses of the blood, object the improvement of the opportunitios important of all trout stations. During the | peereases of the realm, soldi of the creator of new ideas. As things are past twelvemonuth about 3,000,000 lake and | men of letters and women of “Her blue eyes wider. ‘The are BETWEEN THE LEAVES OF THE | always with us,’ T know of against too m y when I en’ oo cpeobal tenaliy Suse: Sowaeed mcguire oes revence, 0, ‘pausing to make my most PROPHESY OF ISAIAH. ch ep a Foulatimat it T did pape would ratiating bow, Ptgok her by the hand, and i t assistance I needed.” gently tok tam eretly pleased fo hear ber my thie from the one window fell full WRITTEN FOR for I'am very fond of my young friend, THE EVENING STAR BY | Te, coply indignant also against the unknown | "You must pardon my intrusion upon you at ANNA KATHERINE GREEN. orn who had taken advantage of my regard | a time when you are naturally busy, but there for this young girl to force money from me. I | is something you can dofor me that will rid me - therefore did’ not linger at her side, but after | of a great anxiety. You remember. being in ‘Held Here in April Next. T How Foundlings Are Carefully Pro- vided For in Peru. THE CURIOUS TURNSTILE. How the Little Ones Are Received and Cared [Copyrighted } due apologies hastened immediately here,where Hotel one morning last month?” For—Taught Useful Trades—Work of the OVER FOUR HUNDRED CHILDREX. now, the inventor seems to be accorded 0 | brook il yo cnen: | ben pacmearn there is. loved who to my knowled; She was look: juietly up at », her ef trout have been contribated by com. waty, pri’ cermce eee een Seca ueetes aktee paaee parted ber era ste ee eet Eat et | Sisters of Charity—An Inspection of the| At present there are 496 children in the agy-| recognition worth mentioning, although he mission to the waters of this country in the | boards “Telling him no more of the story than was | the mention of that hotel I thougat—and yet 1| reat Building—Human Floteam. lum. The smallest of these able to be out of | may fairly be said to represent the element of | shane of oggs and young fry. One of his greatest muccessns was the sufling to insure his ition in the | may have been mistaken—that a t change the nursery (a class of seven between the | progress in this enlightened age. . i wr I MET TAYLOR AT THE CLUB poms A ~ oe es memee of Wane ee cen tt hae ny ant ripe forty- ror = ram rae Trout cannot be successfully propagated in | photograph of the queen, taken twenty-four the other night he looked so cheerful I formed to disco xproasi = years) were put =e yet, though the geni country is | jars, like shad. Troughs must be used, throngh | years ago. scarcely knew him. fraud T extracted the bank notes from the | the glance grew more gentle and the emile more | From the Star's Traveling Commissioner. ir best paces for our edification, with little | distinctively inventive, it is claimed that in- | Shich running water pames over the fertilized |” Indeed, Mr, Downer saya, this i hhiv chef “What is it?” cried I, advancing with out- | pieces illa paper. Paki y But her voice when she answered was the ‘Anequira, Perv, 1890. ete — Yentors are neglected. Congress refuses t0 | ees The commission maintains trout hatch- | d'@avre, for her majesty on most oocnsions stretched hand. 80 filled to the hotel already alluded toI placed | same as that with which she had uttered her THE CENTER OF THIS OLD CITY, Pay any attention to them. The national legis: | cries at Wytheville, Va, Neosho, Leadville | “mes a grave and solemn mi the lens “Tam going to be married,” was his gay re-|it at the opening chapters of Isaiah in the | greeting. ea ES nearly opposite the ruins of what was once lature will not appropriate the money needed |and Northville, Mich. It is not #0 easy to ee- | NS." dangerous weap : ply. “This is my last night at the club. of the rooms when I went in and Lencountered | have been there: 1 go t0 90 ‘any ace ‘why the woman's hospital, which was shaken down for building a proper patent office, and the | ject a locality for the purpose. To begin with, | grave andjsolemn mien with whi I was glad and showed it. Taylor is # man | Sniyq bell boy as I came out, but at the door | do you ask?” she inquired. by the great earthquake of twenty years ago, is for whom domestic life is a necessity. He has . ang. man “(Because if you were there on that morning—|* Very ancient-looking structure, straggling never been at home with us, though we all | forbore to recognize, but wi and Ihave been told you were—you may be | Over an entire square, whose closed doors and liked him and he in his way liked us. at Seiprevinnk apteeeg, commeaiuo ns oe able to solve a question that is greatly perplex- | «mall, heavily barred windows give no hint of : : ._ | stand in some ¥ me. : “And who is the fortunate lady?” I inquired: | Darior and note who went into it. the same gentle, inquiring look on her | Vast nay be going on Ret eccan ios | Dab he all Masenichd ‘netioot ‘gordllar $5 for I had been out of town for some time and|* at noon I returned to the hotel, pemet face, only now there was alittle farrow of won- 7 —— childhood’s use of the latter article prevailed. had not as yet been made acquainted with the | immediately to the small parlor and looked | der or interest between the eyes. antiquity, the utter silence that broods over | A¢ the head of eacl: little cot in the long, clean latest society news. into the Bible. The letter was gone. Coming} “I had business in that hotel on that morn- | the locality and the number of black-gowned | dormitory hung a calico bag marked with the “My intended bride is Mcs. Walworth, the oat of the room I was at once joined by my de-| ing,” I continued. “I had left a letter for a| priests and blue-gowned Sisters of Charity who | owner's number, containing a comb end a a young friend of mine in the Bible that lies on agg P ~ | rosary—and woe to the Incklees youngster who young widow — the small table of the inner parlor. and as she | “Te Constantly gliding in and out its worm 20 i forgets the use of either! He must have seen a change take place in my | quired. never received it I have been driven intomak- | *e” portal. One day, having extended my expression, for he stopped. Wet nodded. ing all kinds of inquiries in the hope of find- | walk to the farther side of tho enormous build- | 4, os acnnsing saiv cheated ; “You know her, of course,” he added after a| “His brows wrinkled and he looked both | ing some explanation of the fact. As you were | ing, where;it faces an unfrequented thorough- using part of our entertainment short study of my face. troubled and perplexed. there at the time you may have seen something | fare, I observed something which aroused my | ¥#® furnished by the large boys’ band. We Thad by this time regained my self-possession. | | ““‘I'don't understand it,’ he remarked, T've | that would aid me. Is it not possible, Mrs. | curiosity to the highest pitch merely a kind | C™¢ down the old stone stairs of the dormi- “Of course,” I repeated “and I have always | seen every one who has gone into that room | Walworth?” - ighest pi tory at the tap of the dram, and saw ranged thought her one of the most attractive women | since you left it, but Ido not know nowany| | Her smile, which had faded, reappearod on | °f Wooden cage or turnstile set in the walls, | indor the fig trees a group of lads from twelve in town. Another shake upon it, old man.” more ‘than before who took the letter. You | the lips which Taylor so much admired, a little | shaped like a circular box, with two compart- | to fourteen years old, who rendered some really But my heart was heavy and my mind per- | see,’ he continued, as I looked at him sharply, | pout Tecame visible and she looked quite en- | menta, which chanced to be slowly revolving a8 | creditable music upon what at first sight looked plexed notwithstanding the forced cordiality of | ‘I had to remain out here. If I had gone even | chanting. I passed. What could it be—another ‘mystery | to be first-class instruments. Closer inspec- muy tones and I took an early opportunity to | into the Jaros room the Bible would not have| “I do not even remember being at that hotel | of the Monkery,” or a relic of Inquisition days? | tion, however, disclosed that the horns and withdraw by myself and think over the situa-| been disturbed nor. the letter either, so in the | at all,” she protested. “Did ‘Me, Taylor say I| Whilo T looked the box slowly turned sguin | cornets wore nothing but pastcboard. and tion. hope of knowing the rogue at sight I strolled | was there?” she inquired, with just that added | and presented its blank side to the street, #0 | twisted per, the bess drum made of a skin Mrs. Walworth! She was a pretty woman | about this hall and kept my eye constantly on | look of exquisite naivete which tho utterance of | like the surrounding walls that one might pass | stretched over a half barrel, held in place by and what was more she was to all appearance a | that door, but — 8 lover's name should call up on the face of a-| "thousand times and never notice it. But | the original hoop, and the snare made from @ patent laws remain in acondition that urgently | there must be water. means a spring | tndow the quest, “ demands reform. with a big flow of perhaps 2.000 gallons & be pleased to hear that if was To begin with, Tze Stan has learned the | Minute. A reg Water works mast Se estab | a. hair, that raised that snifle te | aeaociation OF avn Tal nck wea Teaste | lished to make use of thin, Furthermore, the Ronghe trying to secure the erection in this city of a | Water must be cool. The distribution of trout large building in which accommodation will | fo this year will be completed about the end he given for working models of all so-ts, with | & February. Rower. At present tho government, actually SHAD PLANTING. sit, Brown,” said the qi lie won't, your loes not provide any place in which sucha! Of shad the commission planted last year in | ™ajesty. He maun obey ve and be compiel Medel can be shown. in operation to the patent | waters all over the Union about 85,000,000 | Sit like the reat of us. He Toom somewhere about town for the purpose. | FOURE fry. All these were propagated at the | inuchod to noe euch Among other purposes to which the contem- | Stations, the most wy ord of which is at great hit, all ‘bee plated building would be put is a model show | headquarters here in Washington. The next | Sharp. “The. of an historical character, illustrating the pro- | biggest station is at Havre de Grace, on the | “has done mor of invention. Also proper quarters would | Susquehanna, while a third is located at Glou- | any oue. fo Eaiprovided for the force of the patent office, | ester, on the Delaware. The fish commission which ig at presont cooped up in little over- | steamer, the Fish Hawk, has headquarters at | plain of # crowded dens. Gloucester and propagates shad by millions on |' Mr. 4 Life in murky Shields, An intecesting feature of the dieplay in the | board. Epes are gathered tvexpert employes, |and the northern. burr still building referred to would be a museum of | Who go ou: with the shad fishermen. Many of a patented curiosities an asscmblage of such | them also are contributed by the fishermen extraordinary freaks of human ingenuity as | themselves, who have learned how to “strip” have been collected in the shape of models at | the females of their eggs and to impregnate the patent office. All sorts of ideas for fiying | them with the milt of the males. The fisher- and perpetual motion machines might be there | Men are paid so much a quart for those of the represented. Air tricycles with idles to 4 they bring in which prove fertile. gun Downey was woman whose winnin i fe looked embarrassed and sto] ‘You | pi tive bride. little groove remained, into which the fingers | lard can which York | neutralize gravity, kites with revolving sails @ gathering of shad eggs has not yet be- | only wanted a fair f Bee eee ea eee eaten nated | ony thar nttes ase ne eaegesiodatiec'al |= es a soecea gravely, “Mr. Taylor, un-| might be fitted: and ‘of course the spirit of | brand painted on its ete, “ne conve eeies | 80d artificial wings could be shown, as well as | U2 acoure,, Ht will ‘commence in the | was the opport to show whet whom I would pick out for the helpmate of my | mome: happil Was not with you that morning.” Mother Eve impelled me to try it, Pulled one | had a section of cane cut into a flute; another | CUricus devices for navigation, such as boats ony eager J April, and will last into June. | be had in him. re myself in parle somewhat exacting friend, if—I paused on that | “‘ ‘Yes,’ I returned. e (ooxed startled: way, it refused to move; pulled the other, the | had a common coarse comb with a bit of paper a ape a windmills in’ breeze and tread- | After it is done the commission will start in | and fine lin he acked bimeclf, visions of it. It was s formidable one and grew noze the | | ‘\‘He shook his head. ‘Nobody went into| | “Unhappily,” she repeated. “What do you | Ce swung around with'a rheumatic creak and | over it for @ mouthpiece and the rest tooted | Mills in a calm, worked by swinging pondulums | HpOn its work of distributing. court life rising before him. “Never » bit smaller or less important under my broodings. | that room or came out of it,’ he ae mean by that word?” And she drew back, look- | turned its empty compartment to the view. | away upon finc-tooth combs. or urged forward by the motion of the waves. | FRESH-WATEH ISUES OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. [ses the reply. “A simple art man should be Indeed it seemed to dilate until it assumed | ‘whom you would have wished me to follow. ery much displeased. Journalistic enterprise demanded a solution of rao oi cent ise: Exhibition might be made of the new pro-| This isa very curious sort of task. In the | Child of nature, and in my own homely b gigantic proportions, worrying me and weigh- | should | bon thought myself losing time if I had had expected this and so was not thrown off | the riddle, and forthwith I becamo a walking Q cess for manufacturing hens’ eggs, the white | sammer the waters of the Mississippi river and | ‘ loth will I make my first bow to her grari ing #0 heavily upon my conscience that I at last | taken one step after any one of them.’ my guard. interrogation point until the bottom facts were | Among the crowd of little faces it is notice-| being imitated with a mixture of sulphur, Ss Selbiatanies bis Ssh ‘a in th as | MAesty.” No genuffexions for the rose from the newspaper at which Thad been | ‘But who did go. into that room?’ I urged, naihmean,” T proceeded calmly, “that if you attained. able that none of them are purely Indian, carbon and boef fat, while. the yolk is made | (# tributaries begin tolowor and in thonsands | photograp bast hopelessly staring and, looking up Taylor again, | impatient at his perplexity. such a companion with you on that WHAT THE SWINGING BOX MEANT. though so large a percentage of Peru's popula- lood, magnesia, muriate of ammonia | of pools in the lowiands vob. » anita” gy asked him bow soon ‘he expected to becomes | * "Only three pervons this morning,” he re- morning T should now beable to put my qus-| ‘ine snckat adifee ohich ie aoe nearly | tion are Indian: and other ingredients, colored with chrome | the receding tide. Ordinarily the pools dry up | sion eo skillfully ~ Many are unmistakably aris Benedict. tarned. ‘You know them all.’ And he men-/ tion to him, instead of taking your time and | tnroe hundred a than two | tocrats in features and benring and not a few His answer startled me. “In a week,” he re- | tioned first Mrs. Couldoc! interrupting your affairs by my fmportunities.” | three hundred years old and for more than two | 100 oar bai o-Saxon plied, “and if Thave not asked you to the cere-| Taylor, who was lending me the superficial | She lost het look of anger aud. gequired ono | Centuries sorved aaa convent for the nuns of | Lee, nse ana Pas ayes EARS is because Helen is not in a position | attention of a preoccupied man, smiled frankly | of doubt. Did she survey me so closcly be- | Santa Catarina—is one of the several foundling | Qn tho following Sunday we were invited to at the utterance of thisname. “‘Of course she | cause she was enxicas to know if I had compro- | institutions which have long flourished in Pera, | go with the children to a beautiful estate in the 1 supposed he finished the sentence. but I did | had nothing to do with such » debasing piece | mised her in tho eyes of her intended hus- | and tho swinging box, like ‘those we read of in | Gutskirts of the eity which had been willed to not hear him. If the marriage was near, of | of business.” he observed. band? Or was her expression merely that nat-| France and Italy, is set every night, with its | the institution by a deceased Frenchman. We ‘allow, the shells to be filled being shaped by | 80oner or later and their finny oceupants die; | years he has co: isl mor Livephes from a moist ‘composition of lima but the fish comiission has found a way to | Windsor, and it is one of bis pleasures and gypsum. There are several novel sorts of | make use of this condition of affairs. Its | himself “photographer to ¢ . umbrellas recently patented. One of them is | agents goat the proper simme, draw the pools | ashe says in bis blunt nor 80 constructed that the owner can remove the | With seincs and ship the fish in all directions, | ficient honor for any man and better handle and leave it in the hallway, thus being | to be planted where stock of the sort is desired. | garter. ‘cares to bor- | Last year 131,000 such fishes, a year or more| When Mr. Downey began it was with the assured against loss since nobody > : : ~ “4 i é i 3 a i row an umbrella without a stick. Another has | Old and ready to spawn this scason, were gath- | groatest difficulty that photarapheot U ioflnderit) Sve of for de econd time, | com icy thn tis Dua sould hore ‘gon | leed? Tcl no etrmine'""*“™" P| tute ‘thae ty bo aco sn by anions | Rarcpeg eee mie rough Gun ane vor |S he bare varsix eho ood [ted mur end aaptaed to al"gater | Sot ey Feng il ttt ar ButIcoula net remain easy. Taylor is a| concerned in it, either. Yet my detective told |» “You wi ‘ A hands—a perpetual ope door for the shelter of | the Huesca nee mG, Rasturtions, intended for the use of people who suffer from | particularly throughout Illinois and neighbor- | and the portraits of the qu ood feliow and it would be a shame to allow | me that sho was the next person who went into | she catecdiye wm Just What you mean,” suid | Hr ndalcome walle wlio. aro immecsurabiy | tue bive-gowned sisterliood and Of caite’ | cold fingers. ing states. _Arnong them were the crappie and | demand. though it is ex fim tomary 0 woman with whem be sonld | Gopeior™ TR apeedusiy euphau te ty. «Tant | Wore than orphaned and whose aeknowiedg-| tr enjoy ae hour or hwo of freedom and wu: | , There itn device for preventing the robber | the black bass, these being the most valuable; | eure a wtting. owing to th never be happy. | He would feel any such dis-|_ “I do not know Miss Dawes so well,” re-| is only just. You ought to knew whe i trouble | Ment brings ruin upon their erring parents. | shine? Where wn ia the estate, a bean- | bee moth from entering bechives, as it is accus- | but there were also catfish, yellow perch, white | her majesty'* time. Mr. T sppointment so keenly, so much more keenly | marked Taylor carclesaly. you with this matter,” Ite because this’ lores: | The mother or her emissary, stealing along thet | itu tonee: gardens ae oe an ieee | tomed to do, after nightfall. "The bee hives are | bass, sunfish, red-eye perch, pike perch and | zest how onone ocrasionat Winds than most men. A lack of principle or even of | “But I do,” said I, “and I would as soon of which I speak was taken from ite hiding | deserted street in the darkness. has only to put | bors, fields given eiih batiey ona’ alfa ai | placed on @ shelf ‘which surrounds the fowl | otber species. entered her photograp sensibility on her part would make him miser- | suspect my sister of a dishonorable act as this | place by some one whe went tate ha hotel vn | the new-born citizen into the box, give it the | omy cis gree with barley and alfalfa and | PoSe their doors being connected by mechan- FROM THE LAKES. her bonnet, ‘adjusted wer bs able. Anticipating heaven, it would not take s | noble, seli-sacrificing woman.” fors between the hours of 10:30 and. {"ts | slightest impetusandaround it turns, affording | did one's cout good to sco the forsaken crea- | %,With the chicken roost in sucha manner | Of the whitetich of the lakes more fry were | te hend rex! and mud: “Now, . hell to make him wretched, a purgatcry would | “The third person-” suggested Taylor. to Tale Eee ety tee ws at | immediate ‘protection to the tay ‘coedpant | ec y buttoriiies the elder | that when the hens and cock-a-doodles g0 to | distributed Inet year than that of ahead. Ninety, | Have Just five minut Deby ts waiting dai: Wan SrA teow tx badieg ie enel | Ee tt eee eee ra my | CMY certain knowledge only threo ‘persons | Vnnediate Protection to the, tiny occupant, hildren king care at the litte oice end ahs | bed their weight on the perch closes the en- ae ees . Ninety- | for me.” Mr. Downey is nota nervous asan, in hie itualate supeting Me Wake gas wll Sn hors iy — ite threshold on that especial morning placed it there, A Sister of Chai rity is stationed peer eee Hier of ¢ oe and the | trance redistgn greneiny ‘at just the time when | three million young ones were duly planted, and | so he got wadepuily sete kon ae ifn ne ae Of thete To anh ant, t naturally appeal to each | Tn the inner side of the wall, whose sole bust- | Fosiuj t=", Mtting by, each busy wit all the bees have retired. fn the morning, at | 50,000,000 eggs were sont out. There are three | “Some men have the greatest objec Gemsdend tek eemh axliaremaioaatbe:| Tides tontnceat caso nfal. 1| Of, them in turn for an answer to the problem | 00 the inner swatch for nee arsivale a4 oll. tasece iting wor! aware B. Wasp. | Gaybreak, the fowls leave the perch and the t whitefish hatcheries—one at Put-in-2'ay | having thcir portraits taken, Mr. De Lemna pchylpents pects preeclampsia Takna | tnatis troubling me. You know Miss N—. | pees i is to watch for new arrivale at all | —_— doors of the bechives fly open. nd; xnother at Duluth, and a this? at| “It is «= of vanity.” trac one. I might havo trusted her for myself, | himseif unable to do #0. It must have been | ying n'a Bible ia weteenee, Raines altt| vemo 1s apvaxce OF Most COUNTRIN®. ae ae Tg pera enyreg napa pring inpbemrga fv pomigareat cp ig we ne great | wenger but Ido not look for perfection and Tayl i 5 = * " : work, is intended to be placed on the roof at eggs were sent t nd. er majesty that Mr. DX patie pe pois on one agi - — ony either of us spoke; then he | have thought it your duty to take it out and newspaper column is not the place for discus- | Sach @ One Exists, but He is Somewhat night, where it emits vedic feline noises | The sish commission distributes about 300,000 photograph ‘of the famous ; Ang 5 ‘i - = carry it to her. If you did and if you lost | sing th. ‘ial tions that ha’ Difficult to Find. deceived in his expectations. But i ‘k.| “Where is that detective, ma call him? I | jt” ing those social questions ve perplexed It is too late for interference—only it is never | want to see bins” or ane she interrupted warmly, «1 | the wisestheadsand noblest heartsever since this | From the New York Times. : too late till the Knot is tied. As I thought of | “Let me sce him for you,” said I. “T should | know nothing about any such letter, und 7 you | Sinful world was young—those saddest ‘prob-| ‘What are you going to do with that coat?” this I decided impulsively and, perhaps, you | hardly wish, Sudley, discreet as I consider | had not declared wo positively that 1 was in | lems that seom to thwart the plans of the Al-| asked Brooklyn husband of « Brooklyn wife and tears other cats that come to fight it all to | Young carp on anaverage yearly. Their eggs | istence. One day he happen pieces with its stecl claws and teeth. The in- | canuct be shipped, and nothing isto be done | tendance at Balmor: vention of a Wisconsin woman is a crimping | for propagating them save to assist nature by | sion by the queen, in that can be used also as askirt supporter, a | taking the eggs, fertilizing them, and placing | which was on th per c: may say unwisely, to give him a hint of his| him, to know you had any interest in this mighty and almost. make one doubt His over- is le for papers, a bouquet holder, a paper cut- | them in the carp ponds near the Washington end c rand I did i¢ im this wise: bead y ny = loro heme eevee: Gay. oie = . alts came tion ents whee estan ci si rap bigs kip seein Se house ter or a shawl fastoner. A strange fishing con- | Monument, surrounded by brish fr ae pur- P i ue ‘aylor,” said I, when I had him safely in| Taylor rose and came to where I stood. leetlon Of going there last month.” Arequipa, as in many other parte of outa together, he for ice, for a trip to Jer- | trivance is to catch tape worms, being —< keeping the old ones from devouring mye not the ont of costume SS ta my own rooms, “Tam going to tell you abit of | “You believe,” said he, “that she. the woman | “Not for the purpoee of rearranging s veil | America, leaving my readers to approve or | *°Y City, and over her arm hung an outgrown | swallowed by the patient for that purpos>. e spawn. i ~~ — make bis bow to the world }epuoual history, carious enongh, I think, to| Tam about to marry, is the one who wrote you | that had been Viown off" condemn, according to their individual con- | overcoat that had belonged to her young son. | | Another woman cen aeaioatinsee Gut ch] Xns bibs Wadi cask can Ess mcAsdniion ty thn] Daneel oo On abe eee ae int you, even eve of your mar- | that inf: letter?” One = vietions. “80 ” anid iguowsly. ¢ fish sent oat for distribution by a next day riage. Ido nct know when I shell’ ses you | “Tftcra hie os tee ake Nuk 08 ene whe: recalls s eee ey: | izzy 3 frankly. “I do not feel , i oy pe Mlscey jaaie_ and’ Ev ahoald Tike you fo know how a to acknov ledge that T replied eonscer | forgotten tact,not as one wheiesripped up in an ‘THE WORK OF SISTERS OF CHARITY. ‘Dut what?” persisted the husband. can Sages ankuunertec eee cxteomennes ce Cee ledgo that,” I replied. “One of | evasion. s In due time we obtained permission to visit | “Well,” was the reply, “this coat is for a cold token in.” Bible where I placed it; which of them wrote ofthe foam mhisrhed rnc Tppresang 20M | this uyique asylum, which, like all other be- | little boy, whom I shall find today.” He nodded. accepting the situation good- | the lines that provoked it I do not dare conjec- | © “You remember, now,’ oct nevolent institutions of South America, iscon-| “Send it to some charitable headquarters,” humoredly, though I saw by the abstraction | ture. You say it was not Mrs. Couldock, I “ jot te erg ives - with which he gazed into the fire that 1 should | it was not Miss! Dawes, bat aay} “Oh, yes, I remember that.’ ducted under the direct auspices of the | s1 ‘@ light, and with a cutter inal ially | Coming down a litle whe carvod's rade miidl out of plocd of sap from | Commission are loaded on cars mado expecially | [19"XE eroumds: wearing. ms her washstand. From this she had the lock | °F the purpose, with all the parts ordinarily | velvet cont. The rain annoyed bi made, paterted it and subsequently dieposod of | beneath the level of the seats, save for a middle | for he was in great it in consideration of a profitable royalt: aisle, constructed box-like so.as to give room | this beautifal black ingenious device, that ough: to filla lor for the accommodation of tia cans. Atinter-| upon an umbrella be want, is the nose improver, so called, which is | Y#i8 on the rond the water is drawn off from | umbrella was held over him, and the sec cont, and in ng held over him. ested the husband. : : f ‘ Her manner so completely declared that her | Church of Rome. No spot on the earth's sur-| “No,” said the wife, “that is a system, of F a | the ith siphons and renewed with « hc fm failures. Ont Ta aeoagh ae tezenting, to Tare him from | “His broke in upon me impetuouly scknowledgmente ‘topped. there that 1 aay it | face istoo bleak or forbidding, no humnan beings | course a most beneficent one, which deals, How-|.0e0" Ih? interior shape is that of « pertecly | ftom allway taps. "Tho car stops at the Lig | day he commented to try nonin at tor @ he though mngrossed him. ter?” he uske would be useless to venture further. If she legraded and no depth of crime or misery | ever, with the masses. I'want the individual” : ties and sends ont b all | only. to be very interesting this did not greatly con- Tiedaad showed 4 tole. =<) were innocent she could not tell more; if she | too dark to bepenetrated by the ministrations of | a cold little boy.” ae a he Bape} fea pared wept Fs a Ed ay eae eee negatives, from w ra me a ee ¢t is not Helen's handwriting,” he said. | were guilty would not. So, feeling thai the in- | learned monks and gentle Sisters of Charity-—| At dinner sho told of her scarch. aarp until after'a whilo the result is |CoTding to tequests conveyed. No charge is | innumerable prints were taken.’ Prom te began, “I re-} “Nor is it that of Mrs. Cor i i Fs ” ceived fa oy eee eS et fee | Norte it that of i or Miss | clination of my belief was in favor of tho | Mot merely by the easy method of sending| “I saw boys everywhere,” she said. “On m lett Day former hypothesis, I again took d | Bibles, tracts and the contributions of other | way to the annex boat I encountered bf Penmanship of which at once attracted my at- | He looked at me for a moment ine wild sort | said: en teek Bee Mant ae | poopie: busy gta yo low amuong ‘he agers | oriites Tinton cre a rece ragged, all tention my curiosity. Turning | of way. achie made for the fich or the can; but the recipient | hundreds of thousnnds of prints have b It is not intended in this letter to give even a <p pay expressage from the place where the | sold, and to thie day, expecially on Primrose partial list of the curiosities of the patent office, | C4z stops to his address. day, the demand ss still great. “y f religious solicitade and devoting toilsome | of them were dirty, but they were rosy-cheeked . i Few thi this world aro riot ~oe yr g & % J “ ‘I see that you can give meno help. I am | = among them may perhaps be mentioned | | Few things in this w: 2 more carious ri the thought that this was the first time I had | not'so; it cannotbe so. Why, Huntley, tohave | PeThaps that of a woman also, depends upon Ney in Rate ao aod £84 ae hed two jackets on; others had n remnant. of | Kitchen fire at the proper time in the ‘morning | into being, ‘The grown female jars a quantity | Prowhe New York Sum. ‘ ever seen the handwriting of one I knew so well, | sent such a letter as that over the name of an | ‘2° discovery as to who took the letter from | Led by the matron we went first to inspect Poroggal wpe om we a clockwork arrarigement; a system of an-|feggsand upon this spawn the male subse- e experienced rail conductor easily chor rs for houses in the cyclone belt to ke quently deposits its milt. The milt, examined | Jocates and keeps in mind all the passengers 8 tickles clo | bencath the microscope, is found to contain an is egg has a smail hole in it, and through this | jcket. 6 hout doubt » osm weary spokes; a device hele a pollywog makes Sas way into a Datlons a Seah te See who get on at to dump the servant out of bed at 6 a.m.; n box | Comtained within what is called the “germinal | War stations. no matter in what car. they for fares that gives change correctly and avto- | vesicle.” The result is that the nucleus takes | MAF be, | Brakemen, invelligent and with an matically; cloth woven out of spun glaas; a | life and quickly it begins to iultiply, becom- | °° why ws me nm mon ~" 4 contrivance to keep the child from kicking off | ing two, then four, then eight and so on. These Co eee — an ERO wy the bed clothes, and a “refrigerator hat,” with | cet: all the time multiplying by division, come | Uriskly through the ear. apparcutiy inivut compartment in the top to hold ice in eum. | bine together and begin to form the ecliular | vl om reaching the brake ai ‘the other MY ec ‘tare of the organ»—the eyes and the heart | ™*Y take as he goes a quick mental photo- ‘ : A , cont; stil! others had flannel waists— T perused the letter with an interest that pres- | innocent yourg girl, who but for the happy | Ut, the Bible, where I had hidden it on that | the mysterious hole in the wall. Close to its | the niche fr sat coe ae name wait Satz became painful as I realized the tenor of | chance of Four meeting her ee you did might | Ufortunate | morning,” and "making Ler | nner opening stands tho little iron bedatead — | £86,4jte for, BY 13 Teould, but comine may ale to nF noueh | never have had the opportuniiy of righting | Parture when she ‘grasped me impulsively lo | With a cross at the foot of it end e picture of | away with me aga’ — oe — = saving Innere herself in your estimation, argues a cold and | fie arm. ig the Mother of Sorrows at its head—where rests Vhen I was a second time at the ferry house & modest recognition of my friendship for her — | calculating selfishness closely allied to deprav-| 297 ono wn jpered, and ine lower | the good sister whose nightly business it in to | thers was a crowd of newsboys crying the first ried Looe Tp hres Rape ity. And my Helen is an angel—or 60 I have | tone gtill, “what woman? watch the revolving cradle and to take out new. | editions of tho aftern pers. “Among them ‘afte. tend r re pon Bg Dayoan] Com ay thought her. é I turned and ed at her. “Great | Comers. She informed me that the number of | was a pale-faced, shivering little chap, whose humble ard condiding pit foe the vont at an | |The depth to which his voice sank in the last | neayon''™ thougit I, seen suebhe face binant | additions to the household by this means aver- | torn jacket let bare elbows through, ad whose b $50. Sucks Fequest, coming Treen a | sentence showed that for all his seeming confi-| seigsh and intriguing heart?" and ima fash, 1| aged about three a week,and that vo far during | short trousers were of summer weight, and rt ot 900 ‘and with every vise | seuceyee.was not without his doubts. {began | tummoned up in comparison before me the | tue current year (eight :nouths of it were then | worn at tha: Teanght bis eye and beckoned ble sign of being generously provided for by | what consolation to offer i ventured upon the | Plain, houest and reliable countenance of Mrs. | gone) only seventy-two had been received. I y friend’s and brought it tohim. He was before me like a flash, tinger- tr “ 9 . the said that the majority of these cl ing his papers fox the one he sapposed I wanted. | M&F 10 keep the head cool. firat—of the fin . Finally, when | &taph of all the pamengers. Ata stati Teeter ae eee ny Smaing ts am, oil | sagprction| Get be shoul see Mee: Walworth | (oui /omn tts abot the comely sad unpre: | Teese Leg. coe eet Catan cota eee Coen a tho creature ismade. it’ Darete ite teamapamor | other day a woman who but remembering, her Coudhe aant iat ap gns. | and frankly ask her whether she had been to | thigy'® sai belong to the poorest classes and arrive naxed | up the con. Ina moment he was in it, snug After the now and the Shroud. shell and swims as if it had always been used to | CF excliimed, “I ha is ‘of b eee ae she Childisa | the hotel on Main street on such a day, and. if | “"\you do not mean yourself?” she continued, | °F “Tapped in wrage; others ure dressed in the | and well fitted. ‘Is it all right?’ I asked. He ‘What if we all lay dead below; that sort of thing. A brakeman who stood Sane eed rend ne manner, 1 turned over; the | so, if she had seen a letter addressed to Miss | 44 400,10 not acen af tiotcons ” | daiatiest raiment that love and wealth and the | nodded, and the next second be was racing Lay as the grass lies, cold a —_— looked at ber foran instant and then, page and read as her reason for proffering sucit | N. lying on the table of the smail parlor? wT peteraads “hapetty fi 1. | instinct of maternal tenderness can suggest; | d his papers.” i ‘sown holy shroud of ONLY A NEWSsBoY. than a mind reader's celerity of me uit, reduces, that her heart was set upon siding a | His answer showed how such his confidence in | ¢, °°: not bound up? inthe honor e? sow | that with the Intter is usually foand a generous ?* asked the husband. with suow-white stones set foot and head, faaalorwctelong and with greater certainty of action, he walked that she could not do what she wished becatse | angst aan a oo paying some | into her heart, if that heart was ‘valnerables t not infrequently a tear-blotted letter beseech- | wasagleam vf embarrassed gratitude in his ‘Mother. cceupiod. He was not confused .by the fast ‘What if that infidel some night that it was now oceup sheltad ‘aceady spent all the money allowed | fom took my leave, more troubled and less decided | iN especie) enre for the forsmkca baby and | face athe rushed avay more eloquent than ine vanity. could make use of » young : F - From the Chicazo Times. ’ 27 § ‘omising to pay well for its future support. | speech, which made me sure that I bad found ‘Could then rise up and see how dead, “ be simply asked them to z her by her father for such pur # and dared | girl's ‘signature {o,gbiain, money, would not os —_ cLenteret. EL eRe cpa da Peig aie Chace tt me long cold ida best How wholly dead at out of sat Not many mowcbegs aro from the » country. pocket book. wa there oa the flour whore offended him by doing th's and. feared if she | pani", Fecal She would not even | , woman surprised by insinuations she was too | man frailty and divine compussion—of the old ETORTS TO LA WXERS, And lost winds wailing up and down oe wd ot nap = And — + ew peated her faut he woul caret out the at my q 3. innocent toate at their rel importance, and perplexing problem that came with the tempter RETORTS TO LA WYxE! Capa her Datgen plea c a we) [sel oy pgnainpneoernen threat had then made of s*: ing her allow- yet not © away that letter who xt rol Sy a ——— —_ ance altogether. But the family waa a deserv- | wegen ac ‘ did? Mra. Couldock? “Impossible. Miss | AX ixzxuavstinta sounce oF nevexce, | Amusing Answers of Witnesses When Under of it. ‘The Scheme Worked. ing one and she could not see any member of it | not either of them poswess any more truthful | Dawes? The thought was untenable even for| ‘This box is an inexhaustible source of reve- e 5 You may have noticed alittle chap at the | Prom the Chicago Tribune. starve, so she came tome, of whe-c goodness an instant. I waited in great depression of . a sone a, | From Cassol:'s Saturday Journal. the was assured, convinecd I would understand | qrankgn apts, countenance than she does, and | jrirts for the call which I knew ‘Taylor would | 2° Se eg ueezly every night it} “Ty has sometimes happened that a lawyer has, her perplexity and excuse her—and so forth | women" —_— not abe makes ia evening is secretly revolved by outside hands (prosum-| in the language of the street, “given himself and so forth, in language quite childlike and | "Wait," I broke in, “et us be sure of all the Lap enteamap alae e result of my ably by hy who have eerie chil-| away” toa smart adversary. Garrow did this entreat which, if it did not satisfy my ideas 4 4 A revelations was likely to be as plainly 28 I see | aren within) and purses put in led for the ini: it i wt provetty, atleast touched ‘my heart and | fete veroveve 0.0m. You lie down here aud | it now. He had couversed frankly with Mrs. | sapportof the Salant’ feceived. on suck aca | onee When examining a witness in the court of ‘ny action which 1 could take in the mat-| Will have Sudley in and question him. If yoado | CoUldeck and with Mise Dawes, and was per-| such u date. No questions are ever asked and | queen's bench. ter extremely difficult. hot turn toward the light he will not knoe who | feetly convinced as to the atter ignorance of | no offorts made to trace the parentage of tho | “Are you a fortune teller?” he asked. “To refase her request would be at once to | Rot tum, them both in regard to the whole affair. In | waifs. On certain days of the week the insti-| “I ami not,” replied the man; “but Ican tell mortify and aggrieve her; to accede to it and | *“Tayior followed my suggestion and ina few | Consequence, Mrs. Walworth was guilty in his | tution is open to visitors and the children may | your." give her the €50 she asked—a sum, by the way, | moments Sudley stood Iefore ine. [opened | estimation, und being held guilty could be no | be adopted by whoever desires thom, thus giv. | pete “pens 4 could not well spare—would be to encourage | upon him quite carelessly. opened | wife for him, much #8 he had loved ber and | ing the unknown parcats an opportunity of | ‘The shrewd counsel tripped and was an action easily once, but which, if | "Sudley, aaid i. throwing down the news-| ent ws may have been the causes for her | secretly secing thelr castawaysund of even. | worsted. lead to unpleasant complica- | paper I hud been ostensibly reading. "You ve. | 8Ck tually reposecssing themselves of them without | ‘What is that to bo?” eaid he. fions to sy the least. The third course of in-| Inember that little business you did for moja | “But,” said I, in some horror~of the conse-| fear of discovery unless, as sometimes hap-| “Why, sir," was the sly response, “as you fi her father of what she needed I did | yain street last month? Something I've been | ences of an interference for which I was | pens, naiure is too powerful to be overcome by | made your first speech at the Old Bailey so you not even consider, for I knew him well enough | reading made me think of it again = most to blame myself now, ‘Mrs. | guile and unfortunate babies develop a marked | will make your last there.” to be sure that nothing but pain to her would | *syuc air’ Conidock and Miss Dawes could have done no | reeemblance to the authors of their being. In like ‘manner, arguing before a jury of be the result. 1, therefore, compromised the | «Haye you never had aconviction yourself | @0f than deny all kuowledge of this letter.| ‘The outer walls of the quaint old building judges, an over-smirt counsel stopped short in affair by inclosing the money in a letter in | as to which of the three Indies you suwee ince, | NOW; Mrs. Walworth does that and——” are four feet thick and ramble around tures | his pleading. He was confident of obtaini: which I told her that I comprehended her difi- | the parior took the letter Ileft hid “a cho |, “You, have seen her? You have asked | inner court yards, each of which hus its central | suecesaful result, und Lord ‘Newton vexed hin culty and sent with pleasure the amount she | Hipiey" her—" fountain and tangle of flowers and passion | by seeming to be in deep slumber. Addressing me but thatas a friend I must add that jo, sir. You see, Icould not. All of them | _ “Xe%, Ihave seen her and I have asked her, | vines, and clump of olive or fig trees sanding e other lords on the bencb, he eaid: Nhile in the present instance she had ran no | are well known in society here and all of them | ®24 not au eyelash drooped as she afirmed a | the shrine of a Christ, a Virgin oramint. These | _ “My lords, it is unnecessary to go on, a8 Lord Fisk of being misunderstood or unkindly cen- | Belong to the. most respectable: Ieanicn 7s | Complete ignorance of the whole affair.” courts are surrounded by corridors whose | Newton is fast asleen.”” sured, that such request made to another | wouldn't dare to choose between then eee | ‘Taylor’s head fell. tiled arches are upheld by long lines of queerly | What was his consternation when an answer umn and under other circumstances might | “Certainly not,” I rejoined, “unless you had | _ “I told you how that would be,” he mur-| carved pillars, now etzeukod with mold and | came: Provoke surprise capable of leading to the | some good reason for doing #0, such as having | Mured at fast. “Icannot feel that it is any | crumbling under “the insidious tooth of time.” | “Ay, ay,” cried the angry judge, “you will most unpleasant consequences, and advised her | been able to account for the visits of two of the | Prof of her innocence. Or rather,” he added, | Traversing their moss-grown pavementa, we | have proof of that by and by.” if she ever again found herself in such strait | iadies to the hotel and not of the third” “J should always have my doubts.” found the path obstructed by severnl donkeys |, to the astonishment and chagrin of the fe appeal directly to her father, or else todeny | “They all had good pretexts for being there. | ‘Aud Mrs. Couldock and Mins Dawes?” that had been driven to the inner doors with |young advocate and the intense interest of herself a charity which she was in no position | yey Coullock gave hee earl te the Le tenes | “Ant be eried, rising and turning away, | supplies of fuel, milk and vogetables: and tho | others, Newion luminously reviewed the cxse to bestow. : going into the parlor and left as soon as he re-| “there is no quostion of marriage between | biue-gowned niatrou—her round, benovolent | and gnve # decided Judgme:t against the too “This letter I undertook to deliver myself, | furned with word that the lady sho calelto | either of them and myself.” face shining like a full-blown peony in the sun, | uanguine counsel. for oue of the curious points of her communi- | see was not in. Miss Dawes gave no card, but | __1 Wastherefore not astonished when the week | with rosary, crucifixand bunch of Koya tin ling | Even the clevorest lawyers have been ‘‘set cation had been the entreaty that I would not | suked for a Miss Terhune, 1 think, mad did’ pat | Went by and no announcement of his wedding | ut hier side and the flaps of her wide white bore | down” in ‘open court Ly equally: reedy wit, delay the help she needed by trusting the | remain a moment after ehe was ioformed thet Bat I wee tronbled and am troubled | net standing out like sallefailing to budge the | nesses. money toany hand but my own, but would | that lady had left the hotel.” for ifmistakesare made in criminal courts | animals by the usual “‘st-th-th! underlic! put | “Did you see this tre, that has been men- bring it to a certain hotel down town and place | “"*\4anq Mra, Walworth nd the innocent sometimes through the sheer | her strong, fat shoulder to each one's ramp and | tioned, by the roadside?” an advocate inquired. iz at the of the book of Isaiah in the | «She came in from the street adjusting her | force of circumstantial evidence are made to | quietly pushed it out of the way. “Yos, sir; I saw it very plainly.” large Bible I would find lying on # side table in | vei] and upon looking around for @ witrossns | suffer for the guilty, might it not be that in DMMACULATE CLEANLINESS. “It was conspicuous, then?” the small parlor off the main one. She would | Sirected to, the parlor, into which she at ones this letter question of morals ‘Mrs. Walworth | gach immaculate cleanliness prevails every- | ,,The witness secmed puzzled by the new word. seok it there before the morning iy (stepped. ‘She remained there but a moment arom a ered ibe | where that ono might eat from overy inch | He Tepented his former assertion. Sneered 4 succeeded and shen she came out passed directly into the | PSS Parating two carts whose fight it, wes 1 | of fooring, whether of wood, tile or adobe; and poor and deserving family. These The mirror = words disconcerted me. membered the room, but Idid not remember | Was Just over the table in the small room, but I ‘born street entrance to the post office ‘The theater was crowded. The curtain had building, having very blue eyes and a long scar | just risen. Jewels flashed, gay plumes oa wow- the grasses ané the sod or birth mark on his right temple. If you | drous head dresses fluttered in the heated sig, y are my preachers. Hear them preach, | didn't notice him you needn't mind looking | costly fans waved slowly to and fro, and ther forget tie shroud, aud God for him. He's dead. ese blades of grass to teach "That little Arab was from the country. You f Lifis up t c 2) Sree teaaatonn apenk aa toe wonld as erstood that if you had hap- Abu "Thi va lasses toward the «tag the ash ot expectation that precedes the opening y are: pane of the play which the experienced stage ma: ig ec Rd I frig weep ano ter he waited considera fora tbe it A Town Lot Free. ‘The Sisters of Mercy bad him in band and he ———e ee befo-e the Lell taps for the New York Sun. was as comfortable as co! . the didn't rho 4 ‘ . "Thad heard about the man in Kansas who | need their comfort—nota bit of it. He had |, 1 « conspicuous location about (half way a ” between the orchestra and the front scats f was giving away town lote free, and one duy I Penang spare. You ought to have heard | 1) Darquet circle were three ladies who bad left the train at a small stationand hired a man | "28° OP + come bread an’ butter. An’ won't | Come in unattended about five minutes before to drive me over to the site of the future great | you have some maple augar on it?” They were noticeable for the wide, arin city. I found a sixty-acre farm staked out into |“ “Say, Tom, the phaebe birds aze buildin’ ag’in | U2bTageous y wore irectly bebit lott twenty feet front by fcty deep, but only | onto the sleepers of Munger's bridge.” hom sat one honse and one person was in sig! End ouk beavy dadhe vs ‘ house was a farm cabin, and the person was the | sot, itd seioatagy fee the stage, The wide nts wath their weal owner of it and the one 1 wanted to ree. But another dream of home quickly aroused cistemn ide tiax Icons Gaus Doras cabs y iatemcanens cocaine tive | eas Gled end squirmed and craned his neck from ge ener ee | ——. nest—bere! here! | sile to side. The hate were too large, t00 clone ict cea wader ag orga ear mae yd 1 | together and too richly upholstered. Apparently “{ bed heard so.” right in the edge of this winrow!” he shouted | SEC SSions that he wat eftracting tis atten “Go right ‘out and eclect any one you like. a aa tion of everybody in his neighborhood and Fee ee ee Dire base Toe ates: | “Got some water in yor hataan' douse I” | HOSES, Teestuonce, he persevered il soup ee erated aaa : rs 2 of ill-suppressed jaughter were heard on all 5 And the little thin hands swang wildly about | *ides of him. Then ho settled himself “You want an abstract of title, of course. | his head in circles and angles that only a boy a with ne gen fe 5 ae Flere itis and the fo0 is 6% can describe in the excitement of Deating off Paneer ey A ae already signed and filled my name in, called {oh ny Eo emai 0 wut in the said: pope eer oe — ve | “Madam,” he seid in a loud whisper, “I beg eniigre is your deed. T' have to charge $4 for hig pale (REE pardon, bat i fe eterly uapossible, for mo 69 : we broken up the bum! through ord made tgteked oa ee bee's nest and heaped your bat with the sticky, tomas toes ore. If you will kindly re- a big book 2 move kea wretched man happy “You want it recorded, of course. I sweets into ‘open, up-turned lips | for * whole evening. am the county clork. ‘The fee for recording | as you pressed out the contents ‘of = fitty who were looking 4 da * ‘ “Aviat is the difference between plain and the Bible. However, it to be in the | managed to = piace abe indicated, and though I was not in rela on oat ee whether eny of thas ¥» — Ueheympathy with my errand 1 respected | eee, et ne ae intrusive.” Of the sufferers directly behind them. it Feched Main, stret, and. war’ ta ight of | _1gbed and Gsmised the man. When he $5 'Sas ceeention of 5 cualtans wen nometed hotel designated, when suddenly on an op- | **5,8ue 7s porte iene to the performance again. te corner of the street I saw the yo 1 ited oan ahead en eis eee The details of this pleasing little incident are Eersett. fhe locked ae freah os the’ mating fr ne my ly on his feet, looking aad smiled so gaily I felt somewhat repaid for ter the she mar! 45 [ 8 tf. fi a i had caused me, and gratified re of but one, to 40,” he re- was that could cut maters short by putting te | Bathe Touoran 1 ball cl apon Mix “Be lady to her side. “As soon as we were face to face I the amount you need sealed You see I had it all ready.” “The face she lifted to mine wore so blank a Jook that I paused astoniaies “What do you mean?’ she asked, her eyes looking t into mine can be vineed she ine the per- | those who have loved. ‘Xen, sir. 7) — ¥ 7% ve aa “Then I've paid 58 tings which my owere athe Sindee alee cies. “Upon your oath I demand to know who the | geomet yy" ‘Koch ‘takes to see you, but i do not in combined. In persons are who have attempted this?” cows virus, dilutes what you mean by the amount I is still | , 7 this asylum the children are carefully “Well, si, you've tried aa hard as any of | CBeyene ‘strongest potty = T held out Drage | tained in the tenets of the church and edu- .” was tho unexpected answer. ry in gly- Sictrest sxiagied with curiosity. ‘The En- | cated to = moderate extent in the lore of books, ‘ended the examination. Teed poe ita swindle?” : “Teould ot explain myc. ‘tho world. | while each is tanght some uscful trade which sa! No, sir], A man who will Kick on been made the of their beds | he or she may practice for future support. | It wasa bad a of the west : cure money from me it would like ours. | Thus, while the boys learn 7, shoemak- | pulled one of straight, ‘more! i ae | Rollow beck and seat. ince and embroidery and are wah eg Tan People dea'.” .

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