Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 4, 1891, Page 9

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Pages 1o 12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1991-TWELVE PAGE " ry 1 ‘ ' y . ‘_', ™ o -, . & o o \: ", N 3 N N . hbed ove 9 o1 " . » " damy ST N U N N wrk Herald, 1 o llver e ® o tary was out, and the young man,who under not seo her?”” But he had seen nothing | the lonely street wondering whether L'.'.T;Rifi"‘.'.'.‘fi‘.fl‘i? ‘_Vltilm‘l\w‘tnnn‘ xnx:'dll.rih‘: stood it statted the p,h:““.lwh for the Ftpseemons of my chiidkod, unusunl, and he endeavored to pacify | some deadly enemy hnd planned this words that may . be of Deactioal ise, savs & | young isdies’ edification. Socurlng & new TR Wi haunt my memory yet her. She then told him all that she had | dismal trysting “place; but before i f a New J Tud writer in Cassell's Family Magazine, When | o Z ! to the ith iends and fiery furuaces goen and he begged her to rest calmly | the echo of'the lifted knockers ‘“‘click Ludicrous Attempt of a New Jersey Judge y Magi oylinder he told the maid to tald iuto the That 1 can ne'er forget ; . d he begg 0! o B 8c 0 td knockers lick, Chinese Fathers Systematioally Slanghter aud Make Way with Girl Babies, work is outlined with gold thread, itis al o, she did so. somew Y wntil morning when they could investl- | click,” lost itself in the maze of shrub: | toShow a Woman How to Dress Herself. | miost an invariable practico just now among | i0C: She did so somewhat in thi 1 Y1 lo u, George G iss0s hel gito the matter, This investigatian | bory. footatops sounded along the. bare the best Workes o use two Fows, which aro | i GYO YoM Hhon orgo K 4 eething in the broiling stew, threw no light upon the subject, but a | hall. The bolts were carefully drawn sown on together. One row The skulls of unshrived babl Of maidens young and fair, Wore ords tho smack, “Will stitution, informed mo that she had received soven that day, and on one day thirty were broight in. Of coursa when we do sce “ " g N : t5e PhBaky 0 ¢ | you always bo constant and wrae ! lisped tho » Or simm'ring thickly thers, circumstance which the landlord kegf to | back, the door slightly opened and a | LEGACY LEFT HER AFTER DESERTIO '\i‘ulfl‘fi?fil".’.‘r'..".::fl'~r'4.'\"n.',5'"?f'.r“l."x“&'x":}",: maid, and another kiss wont on vocord. That | HOW A GIRL SECURED PAPA'S PARDON Beclzebub was all about, himself proved to him that at least the | voice shrill enough to have penetrated ure gold effect, s e as 1 tte ;l‘“:”_ | evening Secretary Pearson took his wife and H6 t8ed i bYsth nea iy b apparition was no mere fabrication of | it closed, asked: ~“Who is there?’ M eau mentioned above and the yellow book | &PeY O frigids to hitoltice, Fhes Hatens And give me fearful frights \ "’“\"I;:"“‘!’I'l‘,"l“?"'_:“’I’f"_'_“ and Ky wifs "‘”';"-"f":‘l::"t-h"“;',':1‘-[”‘ l\,\m;}\‘:"fi:::""g ',‘..m fs Rich Enough to Satsfy Her :fi;}‘:‘l"‘!‘}:;v;xlm.\m:m ‘\'\lf“y.(‘r“f"‘-lf'l’\nfl:viv ;I.K ‘ heard Dr. Talmago tell of his tip abroad, | An car-0ld California Boy And God, a savage being, 100, A mombel ong! h | 8 om the Suilos oLy o x P . . od 8 o Thea the luckless secretary placed the eyl ) sy The Nhtotng e His aem, who had enguged rooms for the the four | was cautiously ndmitted by an attenu- Craving for Kubies—Marringe rich glowing effect; soft, bluish-greon ilk, | dar taed by tho lovers of Che instrum ant - to TTIR B SURMDI S SN0 The thunder was His awful voice— months, sent for him. in a pri- | ated woman clothed in faded woolen i China Depends on £u the contrary, produces i cool, QuISt LN | koo what it was," and heard, S0 did Mrs Rider-Forced a Little He sought but to alarm. s interview tholady told of her fright | stuff, bearing herself rather as one in Small Foet. S cord for.auttining 1s greatly tn vogue, A | Pearson aud hek frionds. it took M. Poar. Girl to Marry. LRI g as follows reduced gentility than an upper domes: - RoW . sigus of more fancifal ones’ bacointng | 100 B week of Sundaysto explain tho mattor & Oh, grumble not, yo orthodox, **One evenir al weeks ago, my | tiec. When the door was closed thedark- popular, L donot Hnd couching is so much | & ‘l“‘_“" s satistaction. o basuever usel P B B ALIHS husband, having retired, was slecping | ness was denso until Miss Prime, lead- Wontaa'l Brive. 11564 ns 1t was some timo back. but it is very | ® PhouogTaph since ; Our New Baby. Feom superstition tree, heavily in the alcove. I had drawn the | ing the way intoa long drawing room Coventry Tlatmoi suitable for outliuing portiers and couvrette Fad for Rublos. We got new baby up 't our house, s curtains to prevent the light which I | with difficulty. opened the rusty blinds. | mo yeroism aud holiness decorations. The edges of many articles are | N Causenio, tho richost wonan fn | Comedlastnight, still's or mouse. CASHINCTON T used in this room from disturbing ven then the ohjects about were dimly How hard it is for man to soar, Megatefibibi ernvol 100 | South America, is coming to San Francisco in® 3 0" s A WASHINGTON PHANTOM s it I Rt B LR AR L it ' Cloths look ery well Whea. 80. teasted: and th America, is coming Found it layin® up side o' mother. LU AVIUIL Being anxious to finish a jacket upon | visible. Mr. Nelson followed her into | But how much harder to ve less Worked with colored vashingsilks and gold | Prosently with her twodaughters, Sheis a | Pa hesays'vs my ittle brother. e which 1 was working, and not being | the dreary room and by her invitation [ Than what his mistress loves him for, thread, D'oyleys, duchess toilot tavle stips, | woman of forty-five and has well prescrved Eteanor Sherman Thackera in New York Record. | slecpy, I sat here, sometimes reading a | seated himself on what had been the 4 doss with save whEY do e THusb side-board cloths and table centers may all hor good looks, as well as$40,000,000. She Pa SaY W en th !v:\:l_ its old It 1s diffieult for tho Washington visic | bit and sometimes sewing, until after | stato sofa, stiff and black. A fow pic. | Hodoes with cuse whatdohomust | | Bullhiod in this way, | The edges st bo | o s o iz and hae s ooty of ail | A% MOV Won't miid aay cold. tor of today to picture our broad, smooth | midnight. i The door o I{u-lu‘-ul and | turesstill hung on the dusty \\'n{l?. ;m;l $E5 Bt SHav's oalled Vo' maat Her L isb overcast to make them stroi Darned | 115" oal i South América, bsing the. ownor But now th' doors mus’ be kep' closed a canin avene 1s & deonly muddy | perfect stiliness reigned. A strange | the carpet, though streaked and faded, rorad porpet ol grounds are efective for cashions, Take a [ the L o b 08@ pore *itlo brother's putt nigh frozed Pennsylvania avenue ns a deeply muddy ? sling suddenly took ppesossion of me— | was -«rll ol IT. Orved Mol veokead Or credit her desired regard. Bola design of thisties, for exatple, The | of enormous coal fields in Cili. She has « pore “ittle brother's purt’ nigh frozed strect, bordered only by low, shabby | 0y feling as often makes one turn | chairs ranged in grim rows and a bave | Ab, wastoful woman, she that may O T T RA e o B conten LTINS Hyotl 18 INRxvelo s palkoo: Ot stome i Luold, S0 K ITain't got 1o closo ner any hair, buildings. So it was, however, in 1857, | when a person whose presence Is felt | center table were the only furniture that O hor swuet self sot ier own price, Joue in ghoen crewuls, Wit tha oxcontion of | seribo tho placo would consumo a pr Ner nothin® but des ved any whove, e ——t m r T y king stores a]os N s Y raise Akt -4 o owing he cannot choose by ay, gl b T o4 Ma me Causenio spends )3t of her 3 and umong these mean looking stores | noiselessly enters the room. I raised | emphasized the emptyness of this once | Kuswing he cuunot eoas but pivy with mauve crewels. The wholoof theground, | Madame Causenio sponds most of her tmo 10 | g o aq to0; Keops ‘em shut nestled the favorite political hotel, | my eyes ‘and beheld, sitting upon that | splendid *‘salon.” Notn word had been which is of white linen, will be | Paris, for, although she is ashvewd business So's th' light won't hurt 'om, but which still bears the name United | very lounge, a phuntom! . spoke now, with closed doors and | How givgn for nought her priceless gift, lightly darned. Some grounds are closely | woman, sheloves European lifoand luxury, Bikes “Do not siecr, sir; it was the figuro of | the dim lignt of the departing day,these | - How sfbiled the diead tid spilod the'wine | dufued, und tho desicu Ioft plin, excopt for | She is 'a - widow a1 s rofusod comitlons | Pasavs tina iy o two G Ay a gray lady—dress, eyes, hair, two faced cach other, one to learn, the | Which, spent with due, respective thrift, o velning of leaves, perbaps a litthe | iyntsof every nation daughters aro @l open "m des like me er you. There happened ent, | gkin were of as grayness—i she >t N alo of rorty. siokness Had made brates men and men divine shading of petals; the centers of flowers, oung anc v »robabl it \\..ml rlm Wttt A ket b ;'_“;“ I‘:h'lfml‘f" e h{:l i ”_“_ff"‘. w"‘l "‘“{ tto ";‘“‘ taleof poverty, sickne however, ave generally worked rather more | 3ot FASLERLL L ‘,,,;‘J“““ Blidamy | Hain't got no name, pore ‘ittle boy! \ AR T i e O ‘hlm‘m kel uln\’:nmnl) ful survey of her guest's | © Queen, awake to thy renown, l'llulmnuu_\' uchof the embroidery nowi- | oqysenio’s fad is the love of collecting ru Ner any ball ner vook ner toy nystified listeners and died away jout asound, My first thought wi After a careful survey of her guest’s | ™ o yire what 'tis our wealth'to give, days hos” intricate and varied point lace | bt \Winover sho hoars of an extraord o vk 4 tino—n unexplained ghost story. Tho | 10 seroun from fifght, but tho fart that | fuce Miss Prime sids *With your word | Apd éamprabina and weir the crotva stitehes mtroduced; " theso roquire vareful | pio> oSS F RN Sonds an expert to | A A Aup saxe t hos homoly's siu Aoy sl had: mas Y cought | My hushand slept so near and would rid- | not to reveal the secret, [ wi gin [~ Of thy despised prorogative execution, for we often find ourselves com- | bt (i by porson travels incoguito and 3 landiord’s son had married and bhrought | i) o oo mude me pause. During | without delay to tell you whut you have : paring thom with the originals, and that is & | nikes no display, for bis mission ronders his | Dore ittl brother! 1t%s des or shamo to the hotel an attractive girl of & | 660 moments muany horrible thoughts | come to hea, L = 1 who in manhood’s name at length severe test for embroiderers. Jife hazardous. ‘In fact, no insurance com: "y h“'m‘tl\'}\' SR I‘”'“*“‘Ur- it many friends and more acauaintances. | figure before me, though uncanny and | aoswered. Must yot 1 Uhis thy praiso abate— stls. . Liadics are practicing 1t bow, and | Drobably. the. best udga ol rublos I tho | Looksso tiny 'n o forlora, She had cliosen a suite of rooms in the | mysterious, softened my fear to pity. 1| ““My name is Prime. Tam and have articles can b hud with the threads teady | 1V native of Hottoriam and neatly olehity RGO Sy R LU southwest wing, almost at the top of the | tevalled ““‘)‘“‘" that & ghost ““"'1‘"; boan for hirty yonrs'the companion of a f That thtough thine ockids burmbloness drawn, 50 they escape the monotonous part | voaps of ago ; y SR Slaughter of Giel Babios, d ) iy spoken to, when it can relieve its soul of | lady who has been my friend from child- And disregard of thy degree, of the work. Cross-stitched patterns are to | * b s it 5 > % louse, with the iden of privacy and | (i 4 s o 3 Malfiiyy bas i Heek &b mitoh Joas i tea i 3 o In China tens of thousands of recently el 4 AR some woight. I opened my iips many [ hood. During the “war her husband | Mainly, has man beer I ; bohad traced, to obviate the necessity of Let Them Cry, Poor Dears, il kel ! quiet. Young Mr. and Mrs. Nelson re- | times, always 1ing_ some kind of in- | was killed,and the news reached her the | Fhan fits his fellowship with thee. gounting stitclies, This Is one of the lutest | womon who waut thelr husbands to care o \~‘ e the iosor .1]4;.,.-‘. e turned from their wedding journey to | quiry, but my voice had taken its le- | day of her infant’s d ath. Her husband | High thoughts had shaped the foolish brow, ”‘IULllllfiyltllul‘I:dl“U'z‘l‘l\l:“{\\)x:)‘xtllu xin\‘,‘:g\(. BOSWEF 10 | for them, says the Chicago N vs, ‘n.‘,”h, lefv‘\\\} fl“r‘" ‘wI\' \nv>-| »\Ifl l\l_ '»1.7'?.';‘,‘ suw find their rodms tastefully arranged by | parture with the fivst fright and would | lefi. a will in her possession,bequeathing | ~ The coward had grasped the hero's sword, Ll . novor ery. A nomly weman looks protly | & tower formary wid o faniitato s in- ather, o sm with | Mot return. So we sat there, Land my | this property to her, but dividing the | The vilest had been great, ladst thou, Marriage in China. and attractive when she laughs at a man's | fanticige, says Dr. Joseph Simms, who has thelr host and futhor. o lod thom with | oy visitor, until sho ardse slowly | othor sources of incormo botwoon Lok and | Justto thyselr, boon warth's reward; A Chinanin profors 4 wife with small feot, | fWULISH @ DSty woman looks hamely when | yecontly returned from an_extondod trip of much pride to their first homo with a Vide Prithety STt ke : s Sy L ;s . ) > cries over the s 18 selfish no doubts | w0 ons ampive, s pructiced [n ever . b 1 Tt thom | 20d glidod quickly past me, aslf shoe | ygon by hisformer marringe. But lofty honors, undersold, and often seleets one by inspecting her shoes, | but look among any of your married ge- [ the flowery empive. 1t is practiced in every cheel welcomo, and le iem | had forgotten something. Needlessto | * *“Phis would have meant destitution, | 8ailerund buyer both diskrace: without ever seeing her face, If they are | quaintances, and you will find that the | part of China, but especially in the interior N i 1 ler 1 buy L4 b g ) to inspeet their quarters. Let us also | say,slcep was impossible, and I related | yalue of property having so shrunken, | Aua favor that makes folly bold small enough to suit_ his unnataral taste, he | Woman whose husband thinks the most of | and in the Loess district. ~ As soon as wa examine the lay of the land, my m};;rhls b to my husband | and the son had always been trouble- | “"Puts out the lizhtia virtue's foce, says sho will do. Thiese girls marry at 17 or | LE 18 the one who laughs - whero othor | go muny miles from tho comst, it 1s quito ) ai W 0 . when he awoke in the morning. some and most unkind to hisstepmother. e : : s ey women would ¢ AL TS 65 DAL L F5Ns IHONs8 Lol Bikoalde The hangings, wall decorations, and | WoLEP o fiitated o summed it upas e sk el L il The Judge and the Lady's Dress. 15; and as soon as one is engaged, she SLE g i lihal loon Hoat Licilom oFhadt embellishments we will leave to the |, g, ¢ funcy, and charged me to g b lihots A dressmaker in Newark, N, J., brought | dresses her hair inastyle that denotes to all BIRDS AND ANIMAL D, & small st ower from ten v s 4 M adream or fancy, and charged € sons could not come east to a o ¢ ' die by ¢ s 2y — thirty feet high, with no door, but a hole in reador’s imagination, or vefer him to & | mention itto no one, for, he said make soarch for possible possessions. suit againstacitizon of that placo for the | and sundry that sne is no longor ia the matri- oE TR e b fpin it plie b i e chapter or* two of Ouida’s interiors, | ghost is ily raised but not so eas “Hor troubles, n long illness and the | value of two dresses imade for his wife. | monial market. She also, with the same Myrott Goole. (WRevaE Just over the moun Tii6 R Bt et fatdnthicwisiE 66 Lo RIdioL which will serve as well, if he bear in [ Iuid, and might injure the hotel solf reproach for the destroyed will | When the case came up in- court the other [ view, wears red or other bright colored pan- |, ¥el Btt, SE0 RV JHREVT BT e g S e mind the: cts; four rooms opened upon that night [ have seen nothing to alarm ally upset her mind, day the defense claimed that the dresses | taloons. Women in China wearno petticoats. | mavkable d says the New York Sun. e R T s :x T ter RatH & amall , prasate. . Tho first'was a parloy | M until last night, when hearing some I have often been in aespair of keep- | were too short in the skirt and too tight in | Bri nd bridegroomn rarely see each other | Brownie is the dog’s name, and he is a hand. "‘"l '1“” SRS i Sk "‘ h . iy ._“i 'Lli s 5 1“_ | one driveup fo ihe hotel atubout2 | ing her without uid, but she begs me | howaist, and that the skirt and waist did | beforothey aro married, s matetes are gon- [ some Bnglish settervoil broken on sune aud HM_’l “‘m I\w\ l\“:.u .‘x:.uh.: J :m cruel Rl SR BAI AR OITLHG LN e e, | o L e L strangers near. ; 5 endant’s wife shoud pit ou one of the | riage, it is not customary for husband and | i3 \itule Inke which formerly fed the Whool | Sinehierad in e empire. . One - Chivamin BEHEY: ¥O0IS CWoIS 1 HDAdIonE Dearotn: |ty REO VL OB g 10 I'vo months ago there were serious | dresses and submitit to the inspostion of the | wife to be secen out of doors together. In | of the blowing apparatus of an old iron fur- | buing interrogated tbout the destruction of ARTa Lt 2 itor in the same place as bofore, mptoms in her malady and this piace | couet, The judge placed bis private roc fact, most Chinese wives ure kept in us much | naco, the ruins of which may be scen just | his recently bor 1 silds. (Whbie:iyite R Eaall G AR (DHe derlor; iHeds | e ! 3 i N 3 court. The judge placed his private room at N 3 i his recontly born givl, suid: “I'ne wite ery o e A b & s with quick impulse of determination I ame intolerable to her. She wished [ }ov gisposal and when she came out, clad in a | Stclusion as possible. Polygamy 1s every below thedam, The pond is famous for its | and cry, bat kill all amoe. In every luge room nnd dressing-room wore constantly | gaid, ‘What do you want? She raised | o bo taken away, and having v smail | Ton < =Hoss sac Wher SEeSREE Ot C00 1 where, and when a rich man has chosen his | big pickerel, and_Mr. Cook enjoys catehing | city in China there asylums for the care opened, and a door from the last opened | hep pray siender hands which bhad lain | pug sufficiont sum of monoy T took her | PINK silk dress trimmed with blue silk velvet | fiyst wife with fert small enough to please | them in water. Browuie likes the sport, too. of orphans, supported and conducted by for- o into the trunk room. Weeks -passed | |igtlessly in her lap to her gray face, | to your hotel, where we had two small | | was noticed that a strip bf white appeared | him, he takes from two to five more whose | and iavariably follows his master when ho | pign who sive yearly from slaughtor tons 3 with the usual rapidity of early married | vose qufekly und disappeared. I rushed | 1ooms i the most retived part of the | between thoskirt and the-avaist. That par- | foct wiay bo of more usofal “size, but | sccs preparations for a fishiug teip The | of thoutunds of feiule ufants, At Hankow, ife. Little dinn: and various enter- > 3 aw a9 oD e Ly h ks % % ticular strip may probably nave 0y e 9 subje | s done thro ¢ « y which is 600 mites inland I visited a 1Roman life. Little di 1vari K to the door and saw the back of her | pouse, She did not lewve her bed and | teul ip babl; they must all b2 subject to the' com. | fishing is done through twenty or thirty holes | \which iy 600 mit Thad Tiylaiteds 1t tainments for the bride tilled the autumn, | ¢own just tarning down the stairway.” | g 3 1% dsprel ‘-l For 5 beon a part ot—io, matter | Mand m.ul control of “tho small footed | ju theice, and over each holeis a simple de- | Catholic ovphan. for_children that have | stic e b diumEot b rbheR | B0 108y HriariCown tho tekal s 5 y depressed. For e e ™ doubtiess . somethias | 1e: the reason uppearing to be that superior | vico couslting of a twik frozen into the ico | s beon cast out to porish. Mother Paula brought more leisure and quiet. Urgent AL “"I“ Nt I"‘l'i‘ gk days she required so much attention that Larstin forming oot o aomethiug | birthani broeding are thus marked. Of | so that it inclines over the hole. A noteh 8 | Vismara,the lady superior of tis 1 elsure . U your room?” asked the landiord, w sars roquisite amoun I slept at night heayi apparent unconcern. The small trunk SAL 2 o'clock,” was the answer. ‘It wag ut that time that my son and his y from exhaustion. | oUeili” but the fact thay it was soon at all ought to have convinced.the: judge thit there was something wrong somewhere. On the oourse these very small feet are not useful | gashed into the twig and the line is crowdea for walking, and the dangerof falling and | hightly into the gash in such a position that a fricturing boues on usiug uny activity, ren- | pieceof red Haunell attached to the line is ders a worman very helpless aud ol bt use- | supported a foot or business cailed Mr. Nelson to New York, but he was to revurn the following day. His wife had retired to her room, and vo brought held our simple wardrobe. Among hor things A R4 o bovothe water, W hen S bad. tiaver., Uoens. oonsiined:to mubab: H b v she had insisted upon bringing her gray | contrary, however, he missed the opportu- [ jassr The law: 3 (i gy it e, honb hac - navar ,yabiky sohsig Likahlg gown, bewitching in its luces. s "“;"f”‘ thom whether they saw this strang | her room here. Two mornings during | wio had evidently been exposed to uncalled- | yess, jealousy, barrenncss, theft, disobed- | view. Brownie knows this as Well s any | sometimes they are buried alivo by the father: the gas low. and lounging in a large | lady. He paused. "I cannot hope that | our fast week in your house, and once | for comment; and at the same tume he found | jcnce, leprosy, aed talkativeness, ' The laws | man who ever watched a tip-up and he ean | But while yet iiving are ug up by some ond arm-chair near the lamp made a pretty | you will remain here, but for the pres- | pofore, T found this dress had been taken | dimself C"\"‘;N" with -"’"l‘u"“" -_-.I:ml all be- | aro for the protection of men. —The women | sce better than anyone who fishes on that | eige. and brought to this institution. Several picture of comfor 3 i ent at leust, you will not mention this | out of 'the trunk, and upon these morn- | Shise e had unforlanaiely Seheht 1o apply | do not scemi to be cousidered worth logal pro- | poud. Mr. Cock”lets Brownie do ull the | woen are employed by the mother su periof Page after page of **Vanity Fair” was fortunate occurrence. i 5 ¢ 1g Soh male mothods of remedying defects in cloth- | tection. A man is liable to punislineut if he | watching, and the dog is perfectly willing to | § i lonBre tHatlibtio v ot ety I unfor E f ings Mrs. D. slopt’ iate and seemed | jng tothe case in question, says the Phila- D RN e D PR in looking about for the little victims. Up- turned in quick succession before she | Young Mr. Nelson hnd seen nothing | steanger than AL, A T Rh x:tfmln;\u wife whio has been guilty of adult- | do R R about 1o | s of thousand are received ovory your. was aroused by the clock striking mid- | and was determined to fathom the mys- | *i0ne night after my Arst heavy sleep | times, when dressing boforo the looking: | hsband, andit “she . miveias wills Shsent. | acses ol s mn e e ronnd ey, | Many of them, of course diosoon afior the night. But who takes heed of time when if he could persuade his wife tore- | [ awoke with a sonse of somothing | glass, he had noticed astrip of white shirt | from his house, sho frardeathic by |ingh R S8 Whan | cxposure and negloct they have suftered e i o E R T s { C e mhcettaa awoke L cthing <Mk o] (X i rom his house, she must suffer death by | ing his big brown eyes on the signals. hen | through being abandoned,” and many are o I or reudine | main in thelapartment. — She consented, | wrong, I found her room vacant, the | siowing itscll bouwoon the spot whore bis | strangling. The legal power granted to men | ono falls ho shows great excitemont and | hogrdad out by tho institution in _the” town. had grown chilly, and after reading a | not knowing, of course, that the gray | trunk open and the gray dress gone, I | Waistcoat euded and his trgusers began. ALl [ over their wives is often tyranically used, Then ho trots to the hole | Mhose who aceept the chargo have to brin fowmore pages Mrs, Nelson stopped to | lady had favored any one clse with her | foared > alarm the house and know she | 1hat was necded Awas simply to = give | and many instances are on rd of thelow: | and begs his owner to come quickly and tako | gho ehildron onco s week for lnspection, and the door of the trunk room in search of | presence. wou'd soon come back, Waiting in my | 53 Ubward, teonboucslide © movement | est kiud of bratality beiug practiced. Slavery | out the fish, but thero s o burey about | g, il being Tight, they o tho pay for ashawl. Opening the door to its full [~ Just one week after thiscoincident a- | room for hoursalmost in despuir, saw | h o ononckle VB g reEulated | is common in China, and a woman is often | striking when u pickerel takes the bait. IVt | yaizaining them, “This Is anItalian chanty, b o ATl SR b BEE IIBNt CoEtea 4 AR e mos eSpuir, § s suspender , presto! every- | sold iuto servitude, jast as a horse or an ox to give him time, for he is almost 166 L.k kb A HIBABIB i G R extent toallow the soft light to stream | parition, Mr. and Mrs, Nelson had filled | oy at last come swiftly and silently into | thing was lovely.' Andso. with his own case | is disposed of among ourselves Ivery dBlIbEATS AbOULIS WOlOWInE L A o110 Ofaermban CRLLENaIY NEI s DI intothe darkness, she had advanced a | their pretty parlor with friends for an | har room, lock the door and throw her- | it his mind’s eve, he straightenea himseif up " UODSL0NLB0, VR, ey SR et 1 ing II‘u'nl\'(-ll‘fl:\':lv\:'--t' _\"vurs of ‘;‘fix!‘ulux&n"f‘(fi few steps before perceiving that upon | evening party. It was an early affair | s oxhausted upon the bed, The next | aud said: “Madam, could the error be reme- Didn't Get He: Money. o fow foot, Spit it out turn it around and then | D05 §aved the tvos of say 000 to 40000 the trunk she was about to open sat a | and midnight saw the last guest lewv- day [ told her we must go died by nitching up the skirt#’ The look of Edgar W. Hasslor is o reporter who has | engulf it' foremost. This delay worric ::m\""‘"-) WomanHogd eI ‘.{«.,[\!uu consider- gray figure that at onceindelibly stamp- | ing. The lights wero extinguished and | homo for our funds were low. She did | {ommiseration which the weater of the dress | wigninthe past two years worked in_ Chi- | Brownie in spit of the fact that hie has been | J5ic'support from the Buropean residents as ed this imnge ypon her memory: A tall. | the doors locked. Mrs, Nelson had | ot question the fact and listlessly | wencd ubon him, and the thinly veiled <o | cazo, Pittsburg, Philadelphia and Now York, | ® fisierman for throe winters, At first be | g gow, of whom there are about 10, gaunt woman of anywhere from fifty t0 | gone into her bedroom, The one jet of | gupmitted, From words of herown T | attempt at “hitohing would put her waist | wherehe now is. When ho loft Pittsburs, | Va3 inelined to put his foot ml'u‘.::;;:::: “"::'; Those' children who remain within the Sixty ..\'~]“f1‘ff "n'l~l“l”“'_h."l‘“‘“““Ll 4y | gas was turned low. Before drawing | have gathered that she imagined her | in the wrong place caused” the judee (as he | ton months ago,lio deserted a penniless youn | fnui under the i, 1o has been eured of Jraiy SHELHE NSUL LI AR hair,combed smoothly over her temples, | near enough to raise the gas u short eX- | gtapgon was pursuing her to put her in | has sinco admitted, undor prossure, “to his | ite, who scon after pecamsa mothar, anl | this habit, and now manifests his fmpatienco | Cotbed and, when oldciouih biught Lo sow, the eyes sunken like the cheeks and | clamation from her husband drew her to dex GReRaR Vs wife) greater mortification than he had e: , A , it 1 growling as tho make lnce, Imiy etodklings, dagdo. othor, e~ ) ken lik the asvlum for her property, and that € e vas taken to the Homo for Dastitute Women. | by wagging his tail and growling as the p b oA A OOV e Ny e fed whon otie of lils §aodl 3 was tal I fal work. They never know where they came stony gray! The figure clothed, or | hisdressing room, where he stood, face | gha had been in almoct every patwof the | Perienced when oueof his - decisions was re- | (418 PR (G Pnm o0 DU A 0 by || erel mouths the bait. When the fish has | oo O N RTEE S e te, | When the rather draped, in smooth gray folds of | 1o face with tho unwelcome visitor in | pouse during the night. When I heard | forsedby the court of appeals:: The story | BAS B8 JE% et Rav. William 7 | boeon hooked: and. ‘pulied: out on thy iee, | arofir yeurs of ago thelr foct are bandaged, flimsy stul. = The hands restod listlessly | eray. Ho lifted a_finger to sileuco his [ Jgor that a +Indy in gray” had frightod | joasdoes nos kaow o¢oryihingand et gt. | of New Foirmant. W, Vo~ Sho e Hunw, | Brownio lies iat untl Mr. Cook says »Eeteh | apeording to the general custom of all classos the appurition. Transfixed with inex- | airy' figure, which eluded ~his out- | known toyou. Itrustto your honor—" | place by o nuil ot a shoeuteing should not be | 1278 sccond wife, = Tuo first was also de- | delicately in bis mouth snd wuics it 10 tho § thofir chances of marringo ~* presiblo horror, poor Mrs, Nelson stood | strotched hand. At the question, “*Who | “"Hir, gl paused and Mr. Nelson ex- | confounded with those frarfully and wondor- | serted by him and tnon fell heiress t £25,000. | o BC WIRER & RECe B e ¢ SIRCTE i 4 z AT A many moments powerless. Then acting | are you?” uttered in a low but fierce | olaimed: You havenot only my word | fully built structures in. which woman now | He returned to her until the money was gone | & BRI R IR LISE R0 BRE [ Called for a B: by After a Year, upon an inspiration, she sprang fromthe | tone, the long gray hands hid the gaunt | forgeeracy, but my sympathy also,™ arrays herself. and some time aftor took wife No Mhai| b e e a0t maclcs cont . BoGH DL LR R About o yoar azo Nelion Mack, who lives roomand locked the door. countenance and in another instant she R R R Aot ol i a T P 3 T 4 latter was a student 1w Mount Union college | pounder if there is auy fight in the fish. In | & “"*“‘"'*flgfvihl’fl::‘-;‘-‘a\\}}:x:;flu‘l;} of |‘|~(‘{||‘)l||t, Even the unscen presence of the | wasgone. Quick asu flush through the | yaq, wund should he discover the poor A Dloa Lox enbat@lyine: in Obio when she mot Hassler. Her parents | retrieving pickerel Browuic always catehes | foor 016 SRt it B WOk SRR 1o (R ghostly visitor held her in its sway while | littlo suito of rooms, along the corridor, | |,qys trouble we will bo turned out of | , 1410 Bot matter miieh to & bog Whether | gjcoted 1o the mateh, to no avail. She has | then by the middle so that they batnee tn | S {Gne buby boy, only few duys old horror filled her mind as she thought of [ down the staivs llew the more angry | oy only home,” ho is good {ooking or. the reverse, says @ | racantly been outat housohoid work for a | bismouth Hetookto tho spart maturally, | BB UUTor i wis dn tho basket, the hours that she had been sitting so | thun frightened and incredulous young | “vS "W consent telling a1l | Writerin Lippincott’s Magazine. He isnct | pro ninent pnysician. ‘Ihe otherday she | 304 is now as wood vetriceing live fish us 5" ote, in di-guised hatdwriting, asked . vl ; 4 JOuRR you will consent to my telling al B X tis o e et blo fathor s dea ity | aead birds, Ty e N near this strange lady, who must have | man, after the noiseless, gray, misty | (his to Dy Bonindiaanghiarianw il obliged to wait for somebody to ask him to | heard that her venerable father us dead. He = Mr. Mack to take the baby inand care for him. passed through this very room.since the | upparition, followed by Mrs. Nelson, | giid My, Nelson, *T will see that your | danco, and his matrimonial prospects don’t fi:\'|1“|:;:.~'r\{j;;;! Jlfl:{- ';‘ui:('"‘r}"';l: ‘I"f‘\"";j;;"l'_‘rl Consumption in Bi '1|'[.u note 7'"\'11‘”’5" L‘{m“a;}nxh\l‘ \y]uul«g II»lnl ro- outer door was_locked, bolted and se- | who feared to bo alone. The office | \unes ave not revealed, and Lean” as- | 3ppear to suffer any serious discount from | 8 S LA L 00 Shure'of his plump ea. | There is @ birds' home and hospital on [ eouied SoUE GECIRE AU NMVEE WOEL 00 B cured the more by & heavy trunk across | renched, no sfgn of the pursued one nor | ¢i,vq vou of my desire to serve you as a | bersonal shortages that would send & girl's | tate, She las gone back to the old home | OXford strect whore peoplo can tuke gheir ”‘h[uwl ithite looieatobih aliiia DuRsHERES its threshold. Little by little she falter- | evidence of her whereabouts. The fol- | fiand should occasion avise.” stock away down below par, or even put r | happy and says sho will never tako back her | POts to bo wursed aud caved forsays | UL bocome s foster mother, and ingly regnineq hercozy chair, and tried | lowing day Mr, and Mrs. Nelson left for The poor, Llonely woman could only ex- | 0ut of the market altpgether, One never | recreant husband. writer in the Pall Mall Budget, nu'- propr for a year she took as good care of it as tobusy her mind once moro with the | the south, and upon thoir return took [ .o PROR G WHERESO TR CHM SN2 | soes w man so hideous or repuisive but tha —. otor says birds suflor chiefly from consump- | 15U ‘was er own, schemes of Becky Sharp, but Amelia, | possession of a small house instead of ST e phane ISR | some woman is ready to marry b m, if hewill Self-Fitting Hoslery, | tion and asthma—diseascs brought on by | "4 e " dressed man, accompanied by a el B her visitor good-bye at the door, they r: but Yo 1 ahe 10w recently patented o the birds being placed in draughty window . , e » <3 d all the re: remed clothed Satter o rler: v only ask her; but men are less philan. An invention recently patented consists in % Vi who was richly dressed, alighted Jooand all the rest seemed clothed in | their pretty hotel quarters. Many of o . e > e A R 4 B ik £ : | woman wh 3 ) aligh b fo S T N ! e th felt that the poor lady’s wandering | thropic. and so the ugly girls are generally | making any kinc of hosicry, for either under [ Consumption is helped on by the birds being | FEFEE TG S0 PE Here and hired a gray. Her oyes were painfully drawn to | the guests had heard the unusual noise | gyivit had indeed }ouud afriend in the | left torun to waste as unappropriated bless- | or outside wear, in such a manneras toren- | indiscriminately fedon allsortsof things that | oV 00 ™0 ke them to the Mack home, tho white panels of the door she had se- | through the halls that last night, but | {0 world, ings. The "handsome is as handsome does” | der it porfectly self-fitting, without beiug | 8re unsuitableas food. Birds are very fond | fArEuks 10 WG FIAH B0 IR (CRek BERO. cured. Could not the flimsy, unsubstan- | wero easily satistiad by veports of a sup- E ———— theory won't hold at all after we get out of | narrowed or stitches reduced or widened or | Of Muxuries, and the more you give them the | W8, WEEC G, SO, IR tial creature mock locks and bars and | posed burglar. SPRING TRADE, the nursery, and & little experience soon con- | the stitches increased in any way by trans. | more they willeat. Wien a bird is woing off | ik lived. When they returned to the sta might she not flit before her at any ir- | ~ The member of congross and his wife, Bk vinces us that itis a fraud and a_delusion, | forming the fabric at intervals and soas to | iuto consumption it us always eating. He o oy bronght the baby with them. Thoy stant. who had had the pleasure of knowing sederd! Trashivi like thut other domestio fiction, about the | give tho required shapes. This con- | bointed to onvund sulds o i oo cone g pided tickets for Now Haven, and a Thus the hours of agony dragged on, | the lady in gray, reserved their opinion Nf_‘\'l;l\‘:}l;rm‘el ?‘;33 :Inmr‘w drumstick being the choicest part of the | sists of two kinds of fabric, termed :\:Ilnpllll:n\l\m::;ih’:"\‘»l'llo be h}‘-n? ::"1\"'15 :l‘:::u Westbrook man who went o the same clty but the weird. gray_lady’ made no fut” | of this sudden move on the part of the his i8 the quAliLy he'll makos W, 2 adeangaade b w0, wosndiwg R | M e acanaili e says upon arrival thero they bought tickets ther appearance. The pale dawn and its | young Nels ns and were confirmed in Bk Sk 8k Sk Sk / e ugly airla et Cn R IR e | o ln thibi eali g, a6 onB opctadon pne — fom Naly Xork: L8 NSRRI LWE | HonlA - tiny streaks of sunlight found Mrs. Nel- | their suspieions when they heard further And this is what he'll mark it: Bor Yoo oream and Frodoh candy. no mattor | without changing, transforring ov in any way Counldn't~ hake Hor, Ll R SR won still in the same position, but her | that the suite in the southwest wing was 18k 18k, 18 k. 18 k. 18k how hanasomely we deport outselves, we | barrowing any stitch ov stilches during the | G, Sauford went to New York from Sea | raturned with the cild. Mr. Mack refusos . courage was rising with theday’s advent | dismantled and closed, as well as 198 S o T e shouldn’t know the tasteof gither if we waited | process of manufacture. This causes, by the | CIiff on a steamboat, taking with him a smull | to say a word as to who the people were, and until a subtle shame of her own fear,and | near it, which they had occupied. Some We can make our lives sublime to have it bestowed upon s as a reward of | increased elasticity of the two-and-two rib | black dog, of which he was anxious to get | dec he was well paid for one year's almost a mistrust of her sonses,made her | timo later, the ralm'{ came out in de- And, departiog, leave behind us merit. Indeed, the expemsiveness of being 0\'ml"ttl‘m m_w:nu.l.gm:'r‘m the A|lt'l‘vl.‘k’:ls\:‘lllvl 53:«{ rid, says the Brooklya Times., On hisar- | hoard for the little one. hastily dissemble. She pulled apart the | tached and varied details and having Claims for jewels bought on time. an ugly girl is one of tha werst things about | to the necessary shape, and when chaneed | rival ia New York he found aman who - unused bed, and dressing hersell, rang | heard it then I tell it as it was most it; there are no perquisites. We get none of | again to on and-one rib the fubric is again of | wanted a dog and to bim ** a by was pre- She Had Her Papa Pardoned . & 3 S Not an order he gavo was ever filled ; the plums out, of life's pudding, for under | its original width. These chauges are ef- | sented. On Monduy morning the Sanfords At R ROy ROLOR OLTDAIA o Lant WO fors sorvant, Whon the slow-footed | often ropoated. o Not o furthing's Worth was ho trasted; | present conditions men'dp ail' tho carvin, | fected without any sewmiug, linking, sowing | woro mioro thun surprised whon “Neifjer | Governor Heviolds of Betawiueo, 1asy week African appeared she told him calmly | Not more than a month after the agaiust s nage in tho rating book and as one of them says, *“All the flue things | oF auy other devico hitherto used for this | walked calmiy into the kitehen and ok her [ pardoned Hezekls k! MBTVIDG that she wished her rolls and coffee | events just told Mr, Nelson, sr., received Stood a symbol that he was busted. we think and say atouf wonen apply to those | purpose. > olu place behind the stove as naturally as if | @ one year's sentenco in the Dover Jail fox served at once. To her husband, who | the following anonymous lett 4 —-— — only who are toleraply. geod looking or Revolntion in Breaimaking. sho had never left it The little animal had | manslaughter for killing Thomas Swith, & veturned during the day, she accounted [ “The lady in griay can be explained. Penalty of Extravagancs, graceful.” | Queeras it may seom, breadmaking today | eVidently walked the twenty-six miles bo- | qosporado,who forced bis way into Vickory's for her pallor by a woman’s ready ex- aea NG, — E strest, N, B.? The conviction of Mr. Budd, a public of- | Now, suppose the same rleapplied to men, | A h i Y | tween New York city andSea CIiff, crossing 5 N nT ARt o F or by Y an’s ready ex- | Address No, i street, M h 3 hio same.as it wi the times of 8 3 home at Sandtown, Kent county, and was Cuse—n hoadache=butin her heat Thi ) ribe or hoax he | ficer, of bribery by Mr. Justice Straight | and thatonly the good-looking oues could [ is tho same.as it was in the times of our | the [ast river by some means enroute. She ) 4 eart she |~ Thinking this some gibe or hoax he brl ir. aight t : 2 0 ! 23 i o R 2 viver by some e ent shouby the latter. Viokery's release from dronded n recutronce of - this apisode, | paid it the- uttention ananymous lettors | hould sorve as's warning to men similarly | hope to attain to wealth anl distinction; sup- | grandmothers; iudeed, it 1s considorcdahigh | hud never beon over the road beforv, und lad ¥ placed, says the Calcutta Guardian. When | pose, for instance, thatthat famous w o | the jury “found the prisoner guilty ho ex- | Oliver Cromwell’s nose had boen sufic 2ek | claln Days, however, passed and nights also, | usually deserve. This one was followed, unoventfully, until it scemed that she | however, hy & communication a w art on | compliment for young wives in these days to | nothing but instinet to guide her vack to ber | prison is the outcome of tne persistent eflorts eot to Y v : 0 e B L old home, of hiseight-yearo'd dsughter inbis bobalf, d: “My God! ' recelved the notos | condemn him to obscurity, s it inevitably | D0 t01d that the bread they mako s equal to o f f de by their gr others-in-la Telligent w0 The chi waled tothe members o wust huve boen tho subject of @ balluci- | luter which demanded more attention: | frow my wife.” The judzo fully believed | would bave done had ho beot o woman; sup- | Watmade by thele wran tmethersio-luw. An . InseliReing: o o LT LT Ll nation. “If those interested in the mystery of | thisand iv passing@entence of a year's rig- | pose Grover Cleveland's tooample girth of | [ o ’ e Mrs. J. B. Daniels of Pueblo, Col,, has one ) : . X A ai B T i iwrreverent hand upon the ' traditions : o the governor o pardon her fathor, and the Once, Foturning from a ball long aftdr | the United States hotel ghost will send | orous imprisoument said: T liavo very | Wwaist had kopt bim outof the White House, | o and the bakery, und has invented u artest dogs In the world. His name 1o, 1u10rs sympathies were so worked upon midnight, she was slowly ascending the | a retiable person to No, — E street, N, | little doubt they como to you through the | as it certainly would have kept Mrs. Clove- | bjous * which promises to take | 1 “BIUfL? Hoisabrown smaniol and his | by the unusual incident that they roadily ap- o S o : [yt B s ek ot hand of your wife, and ‘she must have | land out had she been the unlucky possossor | Pr s 5 intolligence is wonderful. He will carry to RauRE CONF AnLIhoy emily A broad stairs alove, her husband linger- | ., they may find valuable information, } N | vorfectly well from whence they | of that inconvonient supesiiuity; of supnose breadmaking out <|u v,Iml category of O Dring il from the daceler fataliin daks pen |u| ull Ames, N 0 L{n y dis ’1:1‘ ing a moment in the office to give some | A reward will not be sed,but secr e 1% 2O Lo CHURBGON et ) 1o b ) rule-of-thumb methods aund place it in | @ PRI IFOD VIS € o] ) Kinde | votea daughter secure the signatures of the A e 16 Tha R ALYOmE & roward willnas be retusd,huka: % | camen Casesin which extravagant wives | David B. Hill's bald;pate had rendered | {0 Mo exact sclences, Tho basis of | 1k, try to play tho organ and sing for his | gssomblymen, but her efforts were subse- orgotten fnstruetions to the sturdy por- | asto the informunt must be promised.” | proved the ruin of thelr husbands are by no | him_ineligiblo to the' efce of governor the 1l OF tACCKACLACERCI, LIS FHIS OF | pifivess, “Upon the arrival home of Mr. | quently rewarded by @ majority of the ter who dozed behind the bright mahog- No more reliable person could there be, | means of rare occurrence. A wife makes | of New York, as I have nov the shadow “,‘m‘, ..‘l‘muw., S hion s & salublenitrer | Duuiels the dog will briug and place bosid Il‘m,”““.““m‘“ of the stato capital signing any desk. She had nearly reached the | thought Mr. Nelsom, and none who | useof her husband’s oftielal position to ex- | of a doubt that a bald head would render any | 68 100 SAGREL (NI STGREE RIEN | i s slippers aud in fact can do every- | the petition. Governor Keynolds could nog llmm ‘l;;m;h\g- . ‘"d‘ -unl- '"‘i" of ;wr m;;-l-l keep the sun-n-\tl better than him- i{iff\\-';'.‘&“fi{r'JQ"'L',.?.',EL',’Q‘ aid e dusinel ;(‘;;;5:‘;';;0';33;';;‘r"';“'i"xfl»f"‘1:,‘;:“;’m;'{':‘;’m;'g on starch. "The “dlastaste,” it is claimed, be. | thing but talk consfstently set uside such & Strong recom- dress filled one hand and in the other | self. Then too, should it be but acon- | kue e s is powerless ° ©: Suppose, y L 4 of the smar . o comes as & helpful food tothe yeastgerm, Hun, Mazg pios. mendation, and be was forced to graut the N ’ PR A T s oy h R 200, R to put & stop to her exactions. Then comes | head was sufficient to Llast any man’s pros- | SQmes #8 o helpiul food fo the veast gorn, A XY MARRIOH, 5 oy sho held her fun, slightly lWfting hov | tinuation of the ghostly persecution 1o | ¢ho'ox posure aud the wife, the instigatorand | pects in life s cectually as’ it would any | Which it excites o increased activity, The | At Horsington, Somenot, recently it was | Pardon. % skirts in front to avoid the brass tips of | would much prefor to bo the only Wit- | gecomplios of her husbaud's crime, | woman’s—I think most "of the middle-aged | SLarch » the flour 18 eransformed by the | yoticed thatone” of a lherd of *cows hud u An Applicd Lesson, the' Stops. The lights were glimmering | n ate in the afternoon he started | scotjfree while the husband is found guilty | men, at least, into whose hanas this paper | 8¢tion of the “diustaste’! jnto maltose suzar wonnd in 1ts back deep enough to recei feebly from the fow hall jets. A shiver [ on his expedition, walking briskly A d 4 ¥ - - Frery a A httle girl of Springticld, Mass., went up | of afelony and ruined for his whols lifo, may fall, will admit that that would bo a | 800 dextrine, thus improving the flavor, o lirge sized hen's ogg. I was afterward gk s wall 5 e: ofsture of ~ the bread o re- | shopping the other day with her wmother, & E.,,«.d through her frame—when she | the avenue, over Capitol hill, passing —~——— little hard. And, 1n fact, isn't it just a little [ HXHUE I"l“'p"m‘_“_‘l“l‘u‘w’f i~.:|l~ i ”"'”:‘I_ o | found that other cows i the herd had uiso ‘n.‘-‘l::‘ m“"' TR Ay L ::": f - olt—before she suw—the lady in gray | rows of small white dwellings, then Poor Do hard that anybody's deatiny In life should be | Fo¢ 1z Whila at the samo time improving | WouRds on their bucks which o Pl e v B i Bl o ] flonting, gliding towsrd her, This was | vacant lots, he found the number ho | -, A well dressed young ludy walked down | madoto depend irretrievably upon an ac- | (%1 Jrieer, whito ot tho said Hmg BRPOVIRE | accounted for, und it was' subsequently dis- | gavo as the parting word, argo Pl ving Form, o human tread, but yet | Looked for, to his surprise, over the door | Poststreetin: San Francisco one afterngon | cldent over which they-bave o control, such | the clorofy tho bread Brom four 10 801 covered that'the mischiof was caused by | them to my husband, 20— itreet) At el SRR e R S retantions dwalling. Up severa) | receutly, ber litle Skye terrier scurrying | 0s huving becn born with & red head or pug | 930008 OF (1RSTSLE i ¥ 30 | magpies, which, driven by hunger, had v6- | yioht the little girl, half sleepiug sud tir a visible, perceptible presence. of a pretentious dwelling. Up several | gq1o0g o short distance in advance of its mis- | nose! But this is the law under which women | POV | i N sorted 1o tearing flesh from the wrimils, out, suid in ¢ jon: “I pray God to A half suppressed scream escaped our | stone steps, which buried themselves in | tress, A man was standiug on the corner | have lived since the beginolug of time, and it Not for His Wite ¢ fear. 3 srembling friend; the fan foll from her | u crumbling wall, guarded by shuggy | andthe dog, apr = | bless my mothe : and my falher and my thout any provo- | doesu't give the ugly girls a fair chance, > rt et affectionately on the nose, and said M voice and rustle, bounded up and with o | businoss one might pause before lifting | Youhuet vour teeth, my b fow strides was by her side’ With di- | tho hrass knocker to break theawful | glancing lated eyes and deathly palor, she start- | stillness in the lengthening twilight, | AWy s Bu i Jeneral George Pourso Governd £ little brother, and scnd bill to papa, 20— hund as she rushed past the figure to | boxwood trees, was the relic of former | cation, deliberatoly insertec his teetii in the 5 —— Geuaral. Goory ‘.‘ S e L Two bees were observed o issue from a | bl ) pay win her voom with panting heart and | glory—now u moldy house. The yellow- | mau's leg, The victun of the attack wus so ashioaable Embroideries. Beaver's private secrotary, is another vietim | hive, b i n the body of a s Hotteringmerves, Fed brick and broad paneled door showed | Surprised that he was speechless for the mo- | Silk-covered books nre becoming ruther | of the phonograph, says the Philadelpbia | comrade, with which thoy flew fora distance Mo sctonaus in Heaven. Mr. Nolson had beon but a flight be- | plainly an English buildor, Thero was | Wetty ud beforo ho recoverod himself tho | general; thw embroidories aro. often copies of | Record. Whilo at Hurrisburg ko mado fro- | often sards. e, with great, cave, (hog” | Tho other ovouing a litlo girl, & wito of 3 g 3 ang g | yoi Ay picked o terrior, Kissed 0s0 belonging to Poya st times, 4 A . 5, . I jown and selected a convenient holo wt | 4 Y low, and henring the strange sounds of | no sign of 1ife, and on u_ less uncanny | Youdlady, picked up the teprior, kissed it | those belonging to rovalty in past times. | quent use of the instrument,and often enter. | it 1t A0 4 b conyenlent Holo ub | gyey It _“Did | Brilliant colors are_chosen for some of these ous!’ Without | covers. .One 1s vivid yellow ¢ the man, she walked disdaiufully | gold thread emb workea with colo on her mother's lup duriug th | the side of the gravel walk, to which they A ) lor Mother's dap gRribg Sl B O Y e oy e oy | cliildren’s hour, suys tho Dotroit Freo Press, tio airs, Oue day 4 rela- | ward, aud then afterward pushed against it | 1?liy was over and the white-robed little some oL B0tk | taiued bis friends witn coraet solos, Sousa idery ; another, green | marches and op od silka, Most chaste of | tive of the same cognomen visited the gov. ]‘ two little stones, doubtless in mewmoriawm figuro was ready to be tucked into bed, Bup

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