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14 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: Sl STONISHIN DAY, OCTOBER The amount of business we have done within the last month, We have without exaggeration the largest. finest and most com- plete house furnishing establishment in the city. The public will please remember we do not advertise one fact and then do an- CALIFORNIA! THE HAND OF DISCOVERIES. ) THEONLY - GUARANTEED CURE roa 1888 -SIXTEE Burlington Route B.&0 RVU The Burlington takes the lead. It was in advance of all lines in developing Nebraska, It was in advance of all lines in establishing dining-car other. All our promises are actual truths, and a personal call will service between Missouri river points and Chicago. convince you that we have the largest; newest and best assorted stock, at lower prices and easier terms than any other credit house.’ NOTE OUR PRICES. BED ROOM SUITS . BEDSTEADS . . DOUBLE MATTRESSES It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of Omaha and the West a fast mail service. It was in advance of all lines in running its trains from the East into Omaha propar. $18.00 COOKING STOVES 2.50 HEATING STOV 2.50 RATTAN ROCK DOUBLE SPRI 2.00 LACE CURTAINS TABLES .60 WINDOW SHAT TG R e INGRAIN, per yard. 150 | CHAIRS..... NOTE OUR TERMS. So that everybody can buy whether they have the ready cash or not. We will gell all these gouds on Time Payments without extra charge or interest Read our Terms, $10 worth of goods for $1 per week or $4 per month. $25 worth of goods for $1.50 per week or $6 per month. $50 worth of goods for $2 per week or $8 per month. $75 worth of goods for $2.50 per week or $10 per month, $100 worth of goods for $3 per week or $12 per month. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. foot KITCH KITCHEN SAFI CENTER TABLES U NSU“P It was in advance, and is the only line by which you can URES‘ASTHM&'.CO}EHS: feave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver the -XPropehitis, \\ig' ovening of the same day. LI DISEASESTTHROAT [y 'UNAGS .—sflf}ml("mwm It has been progressive in the past. 'S end for cuculu,sl_paumatrza.l ] ¢ ABIETINE MED co.0ROVILLE CAL.| It will lead in the future. Sauta Abie :and: Cat-R-Cure Travel and ship via the Burlington. For Sale by : . Ticket Office, 1223 Farnam Street. Telephone 250, VGOOdman Drug Co. , Depot on Tenth Street. Peoples’ Mammoth Installment House B 613-615 N. 16th St., bet. California and Webster. Open evenings until 9 o'clock. Telephone No. 727, Burlington -Route C:B.&Q.R.R. o Sk 0.B.&Q.RA. State Line DEWEY & STONE, To Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin and Liverpool F | | R N l I l | R E L From New York Every Tuesdav, o 37 and 70, bR Ve ) s PAID UP CAPITAL, $300,000. SURPLUS $40.000. | r == S T e 2V AR THUSL SERERS: THE GUMMERBIAL The ‘l.um.flw SHU A magnificent display of everything useful and AVINGS BARNK HoT=L : play of everything " Lowest Rates. X 2 . 4 f . k 9, 2 Corter Dearborn and Lake Streets, ol for - Cortn oy ornamental in the furniture maker’s art, DEPARTMENT: J AND DAL JOIN BLEGEN, Gen'l W 4 T 1rv.” Thoy huve nd superiors in 1and | 700 i i hicago. sonable prices, 3 UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Tuvns, Hand Welt, Gondvonr Welte | nanuy £ moones, Ax sl at rea; o _— [} In Interest on deposits, compounded semi-annually. CH ICAGO. and Machine Sewed. Ladies, ask forthe | Reduced Cabin Rates to Glasgow Ex- SBRANCH OFFICE, () 7 -&Wlls ,'*“ Vo 0, ceording to location AUSTIN B2 (3 Snavlnxs Certifioates with Il;“erest coupons attached. SLUDLOW™ Stok. Trey them, and you hibition. J s o g&‘\‘ EBENTURE BONDS In Denominations of 8200, $300, $50¢C, Mhix NotiEe hns st e o will buy no other. = ——— M. W EN of and $1000, based upon First Mortgage Roal Estate Securltios | nt ’mv'(;l TR S B et OHN M. SHAW & CO. LrN ESN‘& deposited with, and bonds certifled by the Union Trust Company of New York. Drafts drawn on the principal cities of Europe. A. C. POWELL, casHien. the sime price in the west , bath roows, and wll . Wo have i pé Biix 1 COMMISSION, § § Grain, Provisions, Stocks and Bonds, ients, Rates, $2 and § GOLLA#@ = AND & " LCUFF9, 50 Per Day. =———DIRECTORS:——=—— Margin Transactions a Specialty. 0. M. CARTER, Pres, D. D, COOLEY, V.-Pres, PHILIP POTTER, Sec, | 1h‘Ai" AR cha UORNBONS U IITAN Mnagcts S8 ARE The geST & ). BROWN. ALVIN SAUNDERS., ~ C. S. MONTGOMERY. |, FRED ROGERS, ~ housse s riet cars A aapuiny e PROF. BYRON [F!'ELD. 15 BOALD OF TRADE, - OMAHA. 3 +FOR SALE+ ——— Alma Stovens. He had won her heart, KRO)]ASLEO%T{“LSX\ MATEO. :'.l.u::;-y:.—‘:‘-r-:nf e Gl ‘hf\"“f.:\'\i!':n‘.z;;}fi.'.'i:‘ll.f:-”_\\":;\'-.)rwW Ty but parental opposition stood in the way o 5 y 3 of a culmination of his fondest hop M fteen yoars ago Carlos Narvoeze was | to find disgrace staring b pily until a week ago, | When she arrived he had gone, and band’s cont, found a tintype picture of & | wmele Latloy § ' 1 A . i ey fina D/ full blooded negro concéaled i the lin- | hor nnd she oame dreos Haps and Mishaps of the Matri- |ing. Although of a much older man, | Six weeks later Bailey a in the face of the protest of 1L the officiating priest at the mission ot | and in he Tonial FafMe, it hore a strong resemblance to the hus® | gnd called on his wife's luwym He | father, Joe Stevens, Wiley continued®| The Story of a Priest's Unwise | San co. He was all, handsome | ally turi awyer. Ho | 300 ¢thntions until last Monday, when Tove. fellow, who lived much among the trees | hev shame. With Narifa's and,“and " Uhis discovery catled to fer mind the hitherto oticed i love 4 R SHE WANTED WEDDING CLOTHES. | which he often defended and upt loredhentouyhe colored race, and some poculiarly ne- | Jue, \v gro expressions that he often used. As | sonte r At Girl and Outft Ready—A Marriage | Soon as ho cume in she charged him | S 1. i imacit aSnarcdts =aid his wife was a good woman and he the enraged father fell upon him and and Howers thatsuirounded the mission. | the seaies dropped from smote him hip and thigh. Wiley and He had often elaimed to his associates | eyes. and he suw himself fa his mother, Josephine, came to town | PICTURESQUE RUINS OF AMISSION | that he was better fitted for the world in. He saw that he vielated 1) ey P. B, Aldrich, of | Next day to geta warrant for Joe. Joe S than he was for tne dull, ensympathetic | sacred laws of his church: he saw, too, oy i 1 and the girl also came along to “see ‘em walls of a mission. In disposition he [ that he had set the stamp of shame upon Down South— Wooed and Wedded | with being a negro, and when he cooly T e e LR out.” The party collected at Boyd's | Carlos Narvoeze and His Weakness— | was as aminble as a child, and could | the chavacter of an innocent girl for By Signs—A Terrible Mistake— :l\l‘:mtx[m-d |\|¥\| [m'll, she f ltfni‘n(i!’\'r! ul» as proven that ho '“;“1‘ '),‘;‘,.'“-m‘ h{nrc and m:nlrlsl own l}]milr trouble to A Land of Poetry and Fiowers— I\:'\"l; :\"lh\tlh:;‘:\ de km: p-ml\.\q-.l\u« ot :; oternity . Il_\|~ remorse l\\:«; 'm-mh but ks e floor, 1en she came to she found g A ey S VP | the captain, who grasped the situation : P & £il) voman. any ek man, woman anc perplexity as to what to do was 0ad Marriage Castoms. her husband gone and a little note on l.‘,,‘:{ l','\‘:;‘('w:m?t“ ‘,,‘..‘fi{:h"”fl"_“l.”_“".‘1"““’,‘ R L e B e FGrand; Mountain, Bosnary child in the country round about the | greate n his excitement he did her burenu explaining the absence of | &500 alimony., 01 he divorce and | ) vificato was the remedy for their A Priest's Fate, mission had been nursed back to the | what any other man might have done. syt world by his tender ministrations, and | He proposed_to Xarifi that she fly fused to call upon or i of tho case began and Buailey wus repre- The afternoon before the the young man. Ile once turned and fled, and has not been seen since. Bai- Wooed and Wedded By Signs. 8180 of her savings. The girl, who is | decision way rendered Buiny ® | trouble. The boy, however, held back, v 1 Chioago Tribune: | There was asilent | Bearly crazed with griof, has taken | vor and his wites lnwyon woss walhoy | from tho fuct that he was out of ready T Pather Narvoeze was almost worshined | with' him (8 the Spirit_islad, in i f jes’ steps to procure a divoree, i > St | AN | oash and was not properly attired—b . by his pavishioners. Tt was principally | Lake Tahoe, where she would wedding in the ladies’ parlor at the ) in the strect when Mrs, Bailey was seen | € PRIDAELY B0 GlobaiDomaorat: Thave is nromance!|liusit iatatahat i L N _ ; oo i | B o thoiot) ht . O N Oaa M et appronching. She was ot ot 1y | 1€ barefooted and in_ his shirt sleeves. e-Democrat: ] a roma due to his care that the mission of San | be safe n the scorn of | Grand Pacific tho other night, Cham- g 2 & h £ ¥ 20h, I'll soll you a pair of shoes, loan | connected with the ruined mission of | Mateo was so bright a spot, as 1 was. those she loved and where he could caro plon Buchan, who is employed at the Boston Gazette: A curious old mar- postofice, and Eleanor Putten, u tall | riage custom, which is still prevalent and beautiful young woman, stood be- fore Dr. Gillette, the superintendent of the deaf and dumb asylum at Jackson- ville. There were six bridesmaids, one d to the propo- avenue to refuge itis in- | He always had @ sympathetic word for | for her. The girl the sufférer, and his hand was never | sition. No othe uins are among the | G 010 from a man in trouble. seemed open to her, and two weeks later you a cout and give you the moncy to | San Mateo quite as st ! ley is young, good looking, dresses well, [ Puy the license,” said Captain Boyd. teresting. Tk in Brittany, was recently interpreted in | and has traveiod 3 swell, | AT vight,” said the boy, and Dr. ) a novel and amusing mapner, - Aceords | coadi o reled a grout deal, and his | Gogyge was galled in, and Mr. Bunch, | focthillsol tho Sierre Nevada range | Tuwo milos from the misssion was the | Fordinand Valusquoz nwoko one morn- ing to the custom the bridegroom, im- | hypothesis of "n]"‘l‘ alihanh 1"'1 on the | (16 was authority from the ordinary to | Of mountains, in the northern part of | yanch of Ferdinand Velusquiz, ing to tind his beautiful daughter miss- oniEtA R bradaad | e ) (ONIAA . RER N ces: fusne marringe Nicenses, filled ont a | California, near the line that divides it | perous sheep raiser. Velasquiz - had | ing. heavens and the in orunder them,in the presence of these witnesses, I pronounce you man and M i tate fter the pri rous q ; i ofhomiyaaiso lovely thubehe sivoted | ¢ icouplosateil s o e fats: Girl and Outfit Ready. blank and handed it to Dr. George,who, | from Oregon, and the adobe walls and | built his home among the Sierra N The people were aroused and the sur- | O Ogroom was 0 | suying: thh how you will fareif | Chieago Herald: Jennie Fullerton, ng forward, said: | roof of tiles have been crumbling for eeibelove, andiunnee firaonding/ills ponrahad toniiainising, | Hoaels Conts nndl carnations at their but. | YoU Will make me angey,” and then, daughter of John Fullerton, who lives it in your right hand and join | yyo pastten vears, when the mission | pad vielded hi & ; yoling DUERANBYAL G g | rock conts and carnations at theis bute | {ouiy hor, e says: ~This is how you | near Columbus, Tnd., ereated o sons. " Phéy spat and clasped hands. | ¢ e el L Tt lded b hounteous incol compelled to return to his home withno [ t‘;}‘j‘t‘l’{fq “{,“{"“‘,’;‘j““ NotoAs :;,0,‘.‘\"‘: will fare if you tréal mo well.” A stiort | tion by attempling to'elope in a rather | Do you, ‘Wily George, take Alma | W05 “""“"‘.""'l‘ ';”‘r‘ A “”“‘""“"“‘ athior pud nothis L had saitled b solution dan ithe anyskery agudinky | ruests, ) v spoke e e LALI80m PRERAAL DAL Had nee v Stavansforyouniwileoi excommunicated from the C: rom the active cares of life to enjoy in | the disanpearance of his child, In | word, All w‘\ir‘e.‘:;':l(“x\:\:‘l‘:ltulml‘:.m i umeago iBeyoung] let'z'cl:»"z'm;".'f.“x‘f;.;(l,..Qf _'\'3:\:-.].3‘(1";‘ Jtu::‘:;;; about sixtoon,and '..\-‘,l.o,.,g,.‘[ ‘.‘,“,{‘s = y chureh for the commission of s declining years the fruit of his | comfortable log diowse bilt for_her, | 1iGlabion ACNE S s irst part of the time-honored custom. | One Sunday if he would run away with ur husbind? are.wagindayion Sa0 A 80 . he ; od 1t and, a_was safe from discovery | Ruth to the marringe service. Tho bride, who! Wi e orant e all RenSEal i RewonidiHadd ol TR ia il plied the modest girl. called “The Gem'of the Missions,” for life, and s eldest duys the shores of L And the bride, with a pretty, fond | G5 B0 EC b 0 ighted to > @ o- | it nestied among wooded hill, in a fra- | her 18th ere visited only by hunters,and AREAS S s meuning of what she considered | doso. So the damsel bega ake object to the comple £ AL ! a gesture, touched eyes,mouth and heart, | FEEG AR €I T A :‘m‘} T A T I‘ZK]‘A‘;‘"‘M:“’)!‘&“:‘; nds?” said the doctor. | grant bower of roso, mignonette and | came to the or ] une but seld Carlos oon- and signified that she would follow her | 1o (R0 b 40 o o stroke. shving: | eye to business, and fivst loaded o bude | No one objected. adeira vines and through the waving | was a beautiful girl, with a vichuess of [ tinded to perform the dutics of his husband g i R I, LRI o ok | stend into his father's biz waron. The | Then he continued: *By the author- | folinge of the tall Eucalyptus and red- | complexion and suppleness of form in- [ office av the mission and he spent o W I.I.l'l'l‘sl\l‘\'\'l‘ lllmu‘ .{ \\'\nl I wil after whieh the husband is | necessary bedtick and clothi were | ity vested in me as an offic of the | wood trees that stood above and around [ herited from her Castillinn ancestors, pr.»utv{.»\l of his time with V g o abide,” continued t 3”“"““'“- « the | id to have performed the second part then bundled up. Next cam plul\**' great state of Georgia, which is some- | its sacred walls, glimpses could be [ enhanced by f ir and a IyAr.r d.-}null ende; voring to soften the g ; I(| ‘nl\\.u And the br 1.-,:x_unm._ mgn,. the || 5ethe ceremony ~ith more than the | knives and forks. cup and saucers for | times called the ecmpire state of the caught of the sning mantle of | of Of the world rifa knew | te g his heart, His own face had Jisite’s. hand S ahromsed With & f gl afrection. 0L 2 hot, ten kettle, o ehn of cont o | south; by the ficlds of cotton that lie | Mount Shhasta, with its' magnificent | nothing, excepting us she grrown sad and the light had gone outof Eign that he would cleave to her. B o Hatfiaann i Sl Al S d' ) 10ut in snowny whiteness around height of 14,000 feet. 8 glimpses of it between the lea his eyes. His form, once so straight *“The Lord do so to me and more, A Bride in Quarantine, T B it ARy the howl of the coon dog and th Hand in hand with nature,the prie: Timited number of books of travel sho | and powerful, was now bent, and his | nnid"l)r. mn.(-‘m-.;‘n( avght but death | Now Ovleans Times-Demoerat: The | Jeeping 1gR noos ""i";' ‘h_‘:;"'j‘“fi genpd vine whose olinaing tandrils will | did theiv beat to hv‘:\]vl(!l ¢ the ..;; had been ,],.-n;.. '-]1 |u|w;:u‘]i she !x.;m step had lost i;~ v]:l\llh ity. Humtl-r; part me and thee. 3 " X S Tt e e i it adl L Saaaeaat Sl Shade S e t0 your » | grounds. and rare and fragrant flowers | never set her foot beyond the shadows | estin his work at the mission scomed movements of hands and ey 7| in a very emburrassing position \Il(-\\' W to r\ui‘ I t of the ermelon. whose sweet- | #ir about the mission was languid with 1~.”-5x and bred he as artless as a | himself fc d when he veturned | groom slipped the ring upon the bride’, days ago J. M. Slaughter, agent for the he left the paternal roof about fills the heart with joy: by the | the sweetness of their breath. All [ child, and she went t fession at the | and wis questioned as to where had f 1 3 . M. Slaug agent for the paternal roof abou sarth, and all that is | traces of these beauties have not yet | mission with the same light and fearless he would reply: ng the finger, and so, without uttering a w [ they were man and wif | And then the congratu The silent guests made bride. Theyskissed he her; they kopt flutte And_ his associates would look ‘h other and point omin- Southern Express compuny at Tyler. lock in the morning. The lov ed to the ludy of his choice at | nerve tailed him at t} 1st momen Miss. The couple were on | he did not meet her “*south of town 4 to Tyvler this morning. when | agreed. Jennie, nevertheless, pluckily | Wife, and w takén in charge by the quar- | drove on, and it \was notuntil lute in the | your souls 3 1 . officers, who learned that they | &fternoon that her father captu At the conclusion of the impressive CiEaiacivnt 3 ceremony an evident feeling of relief been eradicated by the years that have | step that she tripped homeward to lay dealt so unfeclingly with the mission [a kiss of love on the cheek of her , caeh » the Lord have mercy walls, Rose t thrive and ming mother. at their foreheads, They thought ¥ the Lord have meroy on | F 5 108 i mignonatto and honey At the mission, as well as with the adden taking away of the beauti- suckle in’ their friendly endeavors to | people in the country around, Xarifa [ ful girl who had heen his companion so hide the infirmitics of the mission from | wasa contest r heauty won her | long had affected his mind. ight a ations began. vrush for the hugged d over her. Their hands around the region of s Dlushing | The next timo Jennie runs aw i Thrifty | fri i ank ature, de v after Xar their heart us though saying that, on L iing | The noxftims Jennio: tun O e o I Socnived | the curicus eyes of the visitor. Thrifty | fricnds, and her frank, open nature, de- [~ On months after Xarifa SR aaion. their b ane could | ol oros on the | Yows she will got.a lover with nerve, B e ey aiaes: | palns wave their arms in the air, as | void of conceit or selfichucss, held them | had taken up her abode on Spiritixland point of being m h the & i { speak. A pretty dumb boy of four was g Bhoyantonisomrn S T e il e Temrtung | though appealing to some invisible | to her. Father Nurvoeze came to bo @ | she gavo birth to a child, whose spirit brush to the gy tune came to the antine eamp when for- A VS they held | powerto rescue them from the confusion | freguent visitor to the Velusquez dwell- | a few hours later fled upward. ‘The brought by his mother to the bride, I v that is gradnally ereeping in o Iship sprang up | sense of her sin and disgrace had He clenched his stubby fists and Ouisegs Tiuune; - Della A Bugklon) | Insibaiols piaoasis ption in the middle of an hundred- | and dec stumped his little foot and went through | 9F e company’s agent hore, who was | (55 PRolly fiv, of Lonns A, e ho otton field. upon them from all sides. The walls arifu. She was i | wrought so upon Xarifa’s mind that she a pantomine expression of love and |05 5 e just now for the rather désperate meth- e that once echoed to the monotonous | child: he was a man and had seen much | survived but two days after the death of ood will. The bride did not answer | "0V U from uny yerio LR Rk AR R AR e ba An Absolute Cure. chanting of the priests’ voices now give | of the world, and he told her of it, [ her babe, Her 1ifé passed gently out- him with signs. Shoe stooped and Afraid to Meet His Bride. Tk S URgIeG. 10T Thalhey 10X | Tho ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT | sheltor to wandering herds of eattle | while she listencd eagerly and euri- | ward as she lny in the ¢ ‘s of the man kissed him and & tear fel! upon his | Tribune: Judge Stone has just | which she Lived was burned recontly. | 0L put up in large wo ounce tin boxes, | 4nd stray flocks of sheep. ously. They spont many hours to- [ whose love had been her death. Her * curls Py 4 AL Junk | 4 LR burned recently, fand is au absolute cure for old sores, burns, | "o iniles frous the mission Lake r among the hills and amid the | last request was th e shoutd be granted w decree of divorce which | and circumstances pointed to her as | wounds, chapped hands, and all skin erup h her mother \t the mission. Their tastes | buried in the lake, whe They soon discovered they | would never look again upon the fuce of irht dishonor et among the green hills sel studded hoe lie mirrorof burnished s 1t is one of the rare romunces whi have touched our life,” said Dr. h ng something of the origin of the | tions. Will positively cure all kinds of piles. marks the finale of a peculinr affair, | K 4 or, ihe bttty A0 | fire, When taxed with it she would | Ask for the Ok AL, ABIETINE Ol In November, 1883, John A, I lette. ‘‘These young folks met at the AR, o TR e s iy 5 > | MENT. Soid by Gogduwan Drug Co., ut 25 » Tahoe isa beauti- s congenial companions. and before | the daughter who Had br 1 institution, they wooed in signs, and | Q&densburg, N.Y.,a fine looking young | ild Myt o8 10, v Jbout it for o long | X ety her box—by mal i conts. ful hod v and on its shores | many w ssed Narvoeze found | 1o her household. Secretly, Nurvoezo Mr. Buchan only left to make a home U;n'i'ng: B "I:l-l“‘“"'i“"‘}\’ il ""' "V | shown a charred fragment of a corset —— vealthy citizens of San Francisco and | him=ulf ¢ ly in love with his | lowcred mother and bube, wrinpc din for the beautiful girl who is now his g april, while home | w i und in a drawer of & bureau Married in & Buggy. eramento have built pretty summer | beautiful companion. For wecks he foue winding sheet, into the bosom of locking the door of his k to his dutics at the wife,” on a furlough, he vroposed to a young AL which the bride, following the | 1@y whom ™ he 'had previously Known, movement of his lips, kissed his hand, M0 W08 & bookkeeper in a large and with a graceful gesture waved ulaoluring establishiont,. He was furewell to the company, who were in- pted, ...;‘316\}“-1(.4)111 y were pri- dulging in an abunaance of silent gos- 3“"('11“."1" |’f‘ nolio priost, gip, und threw a kind look at the old ey told his bride that their union 4 x must be kept secret, as the army regu- colored attendant, who wus cryiug b | \yyions forbade marrying mmong the On Tuesday | residences, and here the tired merchant fought madly against the ardor the lake, and and [ and the successful professional man blazed In )u].» \‘.N.{T, but it m._‘m]l not h-; heart v \ b i ° os it. ante o . | zentleman drove upin front of 'Squire | secks rest from the perplexities of his | quicted,and, unable to restrain his mad | nission. years he kept his scere ried ,.f.lllldw'v:l..:tm L nanted ',‘.',.‘:,',,f\,"‘,‘:,",. Fonloy s ofice. and that. officor was | business and the heat and rattle and | passion, one evening, a3 he was escort- | from the world, and 1 that tine ho had my trousseau,” ' beckoned out. The gentleman handed i:\l'n( the city. All attempts to make | ing Xarifa home from the mvnf.‘nuf, he fmluv X parents to llhmr Bho then made 8 clean breast of the | the 'squire a paper which proved to be | Lake Tahoe i public resort have failed. | told her the story of his heart in I\\xfnla [ gras he buttlod with an whole business, and said that she had | ® marriage li and requested that | The land surrounding 1t has that buraed into her very soyl and | ac and at last wis van- set the fire in several places in the hope | the ceremong be rformed then and | been monopolized by capitalists and | opencd the door of her heart, lvmln;: story above is what he > refully guarded from the clutches of | her into its profoundest secret, und that te priest, where onc of the fires was set. She Dalton (Gan.) Citize said in tremulous recents: afternoon, about 5 alclock, a 1 4 | 3 the door. > oI that the house and contents would be | the So getting o witness, the judge | ca | ! - | f B G1vs the prevtiest thing L over saw,” [ PHVAOS. )Nu !'lm'ilr h|3u l} ¢t omeimad: Rha s s hm"_mw‘u ’:. proceeded with the business, umf soon | specufafors. From among the dark | sccret was that she loved the strong, | wrvoeze wis promptly excommuni- sald be. ‘;l;‘ to 0 \.xAr ',unn: on the way back from | 4 %oy oL tCor furniture, She | the words that made Mr. Cash and Miss | shadows in the center of the lnke rises i handsome man who stood 1 1 and the miss to the : © priest’s houso, and called upon her a0 spirit island, | tor between her and h elements, elt his cried bitterly when she told the story, | Mattie Young man and wife were | a small island, known as ¢ | She is engaged to an estimable young uttered. Immediately after the groom | and in the .~umu.31ur this rock—for it | man. whipped up the horse and they wore | is nothing else —( arlos Narvocze, seven iti failed | years ago, began the lavorious under- she shuddered at the thought, for | disgrace, and he v wits @ priest and was forbidden by | among the hills, loo} the laws of his church to love such as i of the farmers about him for sust :nun A Terrible Mistake. j foru few minutes the nextday. Six Philadelphia Ledger: Abouta year | days later he loft for his regiment with- #go a young man, who professed to bo u ' out aguin seeing her. He wus saut to T hockme a boardér at the home of | Columbus, and from thers to Loavens | A Marriage Down South, Soon lost might of. The Cithuen failed | ¥ o £¥of eapving Sout for himself a | she. But her love for hin was pure, | Sevon yoars ngo he began building his E a Brooklyn woman. Il was polite, and | worth, Kan., where he wis wounded l Leary (Ga.) Courter: Captain Boyd's e g tomb." Steadily he labored at the shap- | honest, sacred, and why should Le be | tomb, for he “wanted to sleep, he said, N apparently, wellto-do, an exccllent | and discharged a year lator. He then | stove st Tuesday morning was the | Tue farmer’s friend has for many [ iug of his own sepulcher almost uncer iheld from her by the church, an { where he had buried his heart. Fate musician, possessed of a sweet tenor | eame to ¢ leveland” to visit his uncle, | scene of the sudden blooming of orange | years been Dr. J. H. McLean's Vol- | ingly, until lust week, when his boat | earthly constitution? The argument §was his keeper, for in the storm of last ost and girl | week his body sunk ath the very ropr voice, and soon won the heart of his | aud his wife, with whom he had corre- | blossoms for a pair of young, dusty and | canie Oil Liniment, for horses, cattle, | was capsized in a storm on the lake | | ! and | won, and 1o t i . Jandiady’s niece, They were married sponded irregularly, heard that he was | dusky lovers. Wiley George had long | hows a nd sheep. It hus proved it be sank beneath its waters forever. { plunged deeply into their blissful dvean | waters that covered the face of his love 3 ivu months wgo, and lived to- | here and followed him, been s for the hand and heart of | in thousands of cases leaving his unlinished grave a legacy | of Jove, forgetting the world behind | and itsoffspefug. L. B. H, > some 1