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Later " thought Fellx. ‘what by must have of it” /remark to himeelt and, ‘eyeniane Urto his loft or- | funy “ay merely ehaculated, “Lucky not: being able to hawer to this, loo a |-whille the ingen’ to & Youn man @ | 2h ran spa go Whyte and, strom over, ‘A Hae Te “asked Brinn, Banka ‘indifferently. aa the Way from the gate and |p on ,to the sietpetl RS. BTRY: ilk going. to the Ine ration, It 18 “gelens for me to say hat Li qwould iike to tothe Inaugura- pecause I ngver anywhere. 1 wie Tt9 the ne ar nm Mr. Nase.” caf me gies gay such a tee ‘ation. Yoo, sity four vt a ‘of them Deen dozens 0 f he te go, you say? “How can ste day when I haven't a tT” It Is too tar od ae a’ lees at some tN plenty of things, : at men ‘we have an account Don't dehy tt, Mr. Nags, Jurid out’ that» mamma and i and my cousin ante Newark were all Be! “ nae wanted at stotes “hi epouryts and charging St to nit Eclose my accounts? 1 ¥et-4tds nice to have an Peli: Hiryver hasan accouat 0 yfinyer has an account, ‘ fie smo to. the stores and have ig weit home like hats and évening “then Wear them once or er and & Whole lot of women ave the Intest modes and ap- Hew things all the time. But-T to dosuch a thing, J don't and, besides, e store “had WA Aocount acted In the Way aimply because 1 “G Iittle claret on an evening | Went back, Why, they could it dt out to cleaner! M the Way everybody treats pial Ho $0, the inaug- L. McCardell... eee { out and yote,a.whole jot for him. And Brother Wilile, ‘for he has the lovellest four years since 1 D “he's taken up withthe music, I sup- ose; that’s all." Maiige sald nothing, b not help thinking thet she, ied ti i hye eoked. Bi Brian be waa a ie | we fn a ‘comfor! or As Getectlv. Ina been "watching the | ¢! Fretithy mansion the whole evening, ‘wes getting rather annoyed. More- did not know where lived, and as that was one mary by to hi ‘neat ‘on the icleteas: remain away from her, and once he leaves the house it will be no vou | SO soar to find out ‘where he arance | ee “He won't mansion he wore even- ie ¢ pens, a ligne overcont, and = sott,| q vet, T'm ‘dashed’ ray a i Gorby, when ‘he saw pear, "If he isn't a de. to ga a wore ene aN patos wi the: foun p | ite te caton the iagi train, wu iherwelght wine, He RaW aw Meee | peak in, Brian. sh itera and fore Mint for Trtter turn “ANI ent Hester hi Pisin ag he hy it his wipe Hence im ie | top, Hing You, ‘tn Pty Walt a bit, my we 1 ina vou fal” shen. ai one hg fray the st! ‘one. by one o ae athey, shook hands and. sald good- ian Ht van ea 7 wainy on her ae a tre val iis. Stars and ‘i out then father and daughter clo closed. mee TE Knows x ing Brian queside, and i batuses it, hind V3 humaett ag | Bay fa realen kaha 3 ht Acid eA along? the! ae ad "ia en fy enboved the cajm beauty. of Loans mur- fellow, ts in bh fy th tone, bes pe hae the sigareth tae pe erly still, Not a f breath of ind» até what gies iver But bio could, voted agalnat Mi, Roosevelt fourteen times that 1 told shim 1 woukl never speak to him agiin if he didn't go right @md moat obliging nature, rusted right out! ahd yoted for Mr. Roosevell, and ‘that isswhy he is President now. “If Thad only the time Iwould write and tell him. I think you should do so, for men, pay more attention to a letter that 1s. written on business ‘paper in typewriting. . "Oh, Well, never mind, Thank. good- ness I don’t understand anything about P¥Atlos, but out in Denver. the ladies, vote, nnd°Mr. Terwilliger. iives out in’ enver on account of his health and because, he has basely deserted Busan Tetwiliger. Although much she cares, 60 long as he sends her money not to bother puny fs l “Poor Mr, Terwiliger, 1 do pint for running away, for he caviataly ted an aweul life with’ that woman, “Bo you ave how it is. Men have no Tnabonatblitties, If a thing doesn't eult ae Ce Ee ray, wale a poor wife} her heart in allence. DUPE and Sr eay “There goes Susan Terwilliger now, | | Theit ‘woman never does a thing but |tun the streets, Where la my hat? T |promised to be ready to go downtown swith her," ne | Easy to Explain, | irl deserves to be ry at gine map Cuckoo-1 wonder what makes f Noo York so crooked? f—Why, it's der politiciabs, dor | 8p se) cia BRI the 8. out Jike if black tiieeadt So of ai og new {| tate he se teh than. the music. raven Yulia eaned Nae prrae aver all te aghty een, of land and inte A wky 8 nae Goce" loved eae "t rent mie ane if T can he! re was Lo one but himeelf in tho thee bday Ay put ‘of the | Smoke, “A romance in real lite pene ey Braddon peer tl tween vlads an me (du ine only knew all. there would not be much chanve of 8 arisen: ‘but she arm, |can never ane Wy I don't suppose Te a rae retical atruck si) Teh my y ahadow-the fellow. on tl nade men 4a,only Frome ane out for a breath of eae |e atid te, At easy I fence, and, taking oF bie pratt 1 Datora at the Melbourne et 8 if ne half expected to feel the feta him, but | se saw we had "met on the at. Ath. for ir, Gorby iad been had ne since| He waa followin at a safe distan see the | Brian rethae. slowly along. Finder tainly repraatnted by ore | counsel.t’ called the groom to him and sald, jerking his thumb over his shoulder; "Got Bridget and put a short halter on tier and run her around the paddock twice."’ and disappeared. Both his eyes were black and several teeth were miss- Jing. “Hi say, slr" he sputtered; “Hi don't think Bridget needs hany white ravgiet breaking Mghtly on stroct apparently deep in thought, Ife! ‘he long, perio ler ran) turned up ag sigs stop until hi Bees the Burky a come a wa ma “Ah!” paid if I were ‘tegeral: eerene moon, shed- fh Sovalhedull alone "aller nty? Bs of fi not answer, but Abie srg Pepi walked Py th i atte rf sine ofoted ae ot! sind cate to ep lt be clearing: 1 to the st. id that he would just have le, ati ved, fore it started, fa Lert on in yew te eve an him or he’ ria." ed, ed himeelf, pt that this fat lose the ‘ne anid ‘and at ter I iivenbut he} ‘And he felt relieved gt this be-| was in no humor to hear chat- Jered an a cab.” he sald, lighting | clenretie and blowine a cloud of | ). which ‘There |; Lert hal ay j oe ue 2 he. ‘ath Wyte on that Os DIY ‘pe ca aia per tT Tw nN, Hen mae Yam kava nie 1d himaelf, Iam quite the'same time he'felt by no means his mind, and’as he atepped out looked’ around ae AG ays) Mary Lavi fy and upon his’ ahoulder, But 9 one at all l'ke the man he Kilda pier,’ and fh of relief he left the station. , however, was not far awa gle, Daugines Ittle village a tall, l of, the Court of Generad Sea- | sions, a short time ago had a | prisoner before him for whom ap- peared as counsel Abe Levy, Abe Gruber and Abe Hummel, Judge Foster regarded the array of law- yers for a moment and remarked quietly: "The man at the bar fe cer- | Didu’t Need Exercise, After All, ‘The late "Pittsburg Phil’ once | ‘hired a groom who was both so- | rious and thick. About the same UUme he engaged a’ cook answer- | ing to the name Bridget and butit on Amazonian lines, He also hap- pened to have a young filly of the fame name, The filly, however, hed never come under the serious groom's care, One day the plung- The groom saluted He returned. fifteen minutes later, more hexeroise,"" Wanted to Have It Over With. Attorney-General Mayer at the Republican Club the other night | related a conversation he over: | heard on the way tothe city from| Albany, The spears were two young women, one evidently a) bride, “Every time we have pound- cake,’ said the young matron, |" my husband almost makes himself sick eating so | gentleman wan much of It, Wouldn't you think he'd jhave more | sense?” 1 “Oh, I don't know,” saplied the other woman; ‘per exact spot wiiere the cab had stopped on, the nighteot.Whyte's murder, as he stood in the shadow on the 0} al ved! eite aide of the street. "You're g to have a look at i, are you? I wouldn't t u-—it's dangerols, stood for a fow minutes /said, sotting chlonets, of Anglesey, “Cracker Btate,!" beatin “maiden, | [though t¢ was often very, rough, His alster listened | you afterward to tell the tale,” Russell street and did tu | Collins street. @ found himself ‘clove to and Wills ‘monument—the the detective to himself, perplexed at told the iret to follow uw fait td A ‘Two can ng : THE EVENING WORLD'S GALLERY OF TITLED ‘AMERICAN ' BEAUTIES, NO. 2—DOWAGER MARCHIONESS OF ANGLESEY. ingston,. Dowager was a Georgla|by Hon, King, she wap jin a ‘few months, roof J. PB, and the born and spent -her odiid'0d In the |became’ the third wife of Henry Paget, fourth Marquis of Anglessey, As the wife of the Marquis, she heceme rélated by marriage to the dawghtera’that he would po on the stage, of Sandhills, in . the eighteen she was ‘Aolng the at the comer, and then walked up)‘‘and I'll get the better of you, When he got to the cab stand opposlte the Meibourne Club,, still suspecting he was followed, 4 hangom and drove away in the direc- tion of Spring street. Gorby was rather this sudden move, but nwithout delay he hailed another cab and piey, at that game,” he himaeif- back in the cab, |a' as you are—and ‘you are clever, went on In @ tone of admiration as he looked round the luxurious hansome, "to choose such a convenient place for a murder; no d.sturbance and plenty of time for escape after you hed fin- ished, It's a pleseure going, after a chap like you, instead of after men who tumblé down Hke ripe fruit, and ah t + es ‘any brains to'keep thelr crime tet, he hailed the first till alana, omege Be a Glesere Mar- Continent.” She was wooed and wed, of Mrs, Paran Stevens and WilMam C. Heary Wodehouse. He dled) Whitney, each of whom married mem: young widow| bors of the Paget family, She alro becamo the Sta a of Henry Oyril, the present Marquis, whoge jewels had to he sold to ¥y his debts, and who first threatencd suicide and then in 1880, JDGE WARREN W. FOSTER, haps the poor man is afraid the cake might appear | intently and then remarked; |aguin on the table disgrutaed as plum pudding.” One Sign of Progress. Fpginald de Koven recently sald ‘tofa ‘young lady, who had been weeks; “Well, have you made Anuch progress with your music?” “IT think I have proof positive of my progress in the actions of my nelgiibors,"” she replied, sons one family In our apartment-house moved out In- | side of two weeks; another remained a whole month; | the third stayed six weeks, and the fourth has been there nearly three months. If that isn’t a sign I am improving I don't know what Is.” eo 8 8 Der Meaning of a Long Joh Iss, ; John O'Brien, the Mayor's Sec- retary, while in the Museum of Art the other day noticed two men, evidently mechanles, admir-. ing Rose Bonheur's “Horse Fair" Suddenly one of the men said: "IT wonder how long It took to paint them nage?’ “1 give It up; but If {t took him ®@ as it did to sand-blast the City Hall T bet he ough owt of the Job to buy that whole bunch jon." as Ie made of horses at auct Simeon Ford tells this incident of his last visit to, Scotland "T was spending a few days at _|1 was stopping lived an old couple who were preparing to visit (he United St Naturally enough (hey questioned me at some length about the trip, and the old vixious to know if it were very dan- gerous to cross the ocean, “I asqured him that dt was not at all hazardous, al- taking singing lessons for several | Strathaven and at the inn where | ‘Aweel, aweel, it's been a way dry summer and I think the sea’ll be no’ yera deep. { Nat Goodwin broke in when the string of dog stories was being being reeled off at the Lamba' Club with: “During my Jast trip with the engineer as we were| shooting thradgh Tennessee, A | fine shepherd dog crdssed the | a trnok directly In front of the loco- motlyé, Was Situck and hurled high Into the alk: Our |first stop was fifty miles/further on, and es I was | walking along the station platform what was my na- |tontehment to see the dog Jump from the tender, | nimbly skipping on three legs and carrying the fourth in his mouth. As he trotted down the street another | Gog. came up and undoubtedly made some Insulting al- luslon, for he dropped hia leg, sailed into the rude canine, Ucked him, ploked up his leg again and jranon,” After a painfitl pause there was a wild exit from the! smoking-room of the club, see | Power of the Elephant, F. Hamilton, ‘Tody,'' sa knowledge of most as poss nology al- | yolumins Ous vocabulary of etives, In disc about ant-| mals suid to a group of frlends | “It may seem Incredible, but it] {8 a fact that an elephant with eutly Insigniticant tall can easily knook down a man.” “Well, Mr, Hamilton," piped up a dwarf, "if that in| 80, what would become of me If I ever got hit with | the caudal appendage of a ponderous pachyderm “T¢ looked down at the two-foot mite of hu-| manity and said; “Well, {f you really want to try the | {experiment I think I can find a stepladder high enough, but I fear there wouldn't be enough lett of bid ba INN tb Veet i vet South I was riding in the cab |; White the detective thus, sollloquined his cab, following on thé tral of the n't #0 sivies as raid to himaplf, off, without Sn; The detective, however, for the front 01 cab in ‘driving o} \ aeaeh an bbonte nd thought Bea rere "Hetermined to ative the. Whole nlht if by oa! alr, man, 1 ieokn through Ba " yea tot I bt)” ahawe. tie neat vient attempt to tae ie the roof of 'the hi tere rare knocked "Go tive, My and b eral use Ca his jade, eat street and di “NNoantound It!" mala "Confoun et the detective, as he got out and paid his fare—which was by no Penny, a haut ia’ over which he had no ¢ ‘we've come in a@ olrel eve he lives tn He went Into the gal Brian some distance frating daly. i bright, moon: . ie could easily dlstin, Tteperald by his light, wane As he went al es noble avenue with its elma in thelr winter dress the moon a through thelr branohes baka ight a Riess tracery on the vias And on elther side Gorby could se the dim white forms of the old Greek goda and goddeases— Venus Victrix, Fig be he annie in her hand (whic Gorby, in his happy igoorance ot he hen mythology, took for babe Ys ing. Adam he forbidden ); Diana, with the hound at her feet, eh Bacchus and Ariadne (which the a eotive {magined were the Babes .) He knew that each of the . and saw ‘ad of him, Underneath jan went,up the pe low path ie ‘where the statue or ‘holding: cup, seems {n- sin with vite ‘nt ty ing down the eg Ten left the gardens Ls near which stands ot tine Dancing Faun, with Duh of scarlet gerantum pea Miike an altar before it, Then he. went along the Wollington-parade turned up Powlett street, whore at a house near Calrn's al Capac mich to Mr, Gorby's being “fat and scant of reat found Imself rather exnatets ed, He kept wel! in the shadow, ever, and eaw Fitayerald give one final look around etore he aii red into the house, Then Mr. Gor! My ike ies Robber Captain in All Baba, tu) stock of pA ie Ato and ‘axed ite in id nee well In ie mind, mi nde ea Bo quiet) enone th mor pl ‘Rao the Aad the "ine fe mM atraigh' CHAPTER IX. Mr. Gorby Is Satisfied. N eplte of his Jong walk, and still I longer drive, Brian df not sleep well that night. He kept tossing and turning, or lying on. his back, wide thinking of Whyte. Toward dawn, when the first faint glimmer of morn- he fell into a sort of uneasy haunted by horrible dreams, He thought he was driving In a hansom, when suddenly he found Whyte by hie eide, clad in’ white cerements, grinning and gibbering at. him with ghostly merriment. Then the cab went over & precipice, and he fell from a great height, down, down, with the mocking Jaughter still sounding In and found it was broad daylight, and ed ‘saw his face reflected in the mirror, old. a not a man to neglect his toilet, hows rt woman with a wrinkled, yellowish tabs, . nd | Whenever she moved #he crackled, and how-| ¢, awake, looking {nto the darkness and) ing came through the Venetian blinds,’ ) doze, | his cars, until he woke with a loud ery)" ‘The cold: water brightened him up pulled him tomether, Still, he could help giving @ start of surprise when and haggard-looking, with dark circles. round the eyes, “A pleasant life I'll have of it if. thie” sort of thing goes on," he sald, bitterly, Me wish Thad ‘Rever eeen or heard = He dressed himself carefully, He was , eyer wor' ried and out of sorts. he might happen to feel, Yet, notwithstanding thetanding all Lis efforts, the change in his appear ‘ance did not escape the eye of his lands lady, She was o wmall, dried-up little ff She seemed parched up: and brittle, one went in constant dread of seeing. wizen-looking limb break off ahort. like the branch of some dead tree, When she spoke it was in a voice hard and shrill, not unlike the ehirp of @ cricket, When—us wan frequently the case—she clothed her attenuated form in a faded brown silk gown, her resemblance to that lively Insect was remarkable, ‘And, as on this morning she crackled into Brian's sitting-room with the Arua and his coffee, a look of dismay at hie altered appearance came over her sto! little countenance. “Dear me, air," sh shrill voice, as bag oy table unfolding ¢ res, ( “ANT that's Decuuse ye, ain’ peed, enough in your 'ead," sald ss gel wisely, for whe had on ie ee Pennies ant it blood you ain’! . Brian looked at her as ‘he paid thi for there seemed fig an obvious want of bk in her veins tif she had ever sept in rail het life. “There was my fathor’s rene which, qt course, makes ‘im m: went on, the landlady, Loibyed out cup of coffee for Brian, an’ the blood 'e EP E aso Ha kedughs bey | it made ‘Im sleep thatone to draw pints from ‘im afore 'e'd walt in the mornin’ Brian had the Areus bans Ne fa and (ablated nenely, cover he letly to himsel Hla. blood poured out like @. river.” went on the the landiady, attil drawing fro! the rich stores of her imagination, he doctor w ouk Erg ea as- tonishment pein ¥ igagerer baal burst ie ‘im—but I'm not 6a, i dere 4, raid again tinea a laugh. How-'+ ever, he said nothing, but merely Rb mated that if she would leave the he Wie take his breakfast. “An ‘ou wants anythin Fut a wily as T do to a foal chirrup, she efucked | out of the Toom. noon nn the door was clove Brian at | pa a his paper and roared, in spite of his worrles. He had that extraors jj) @inary vivacious Irish temperament whictr enables a man to pvt all troubli ehind his back, and thoroughly eye © present. His landlady, wi Krapan Nightlike romances,” al | source of great amusement to him, a! by the od B mornine, he felt considerably cheere turn her humor had taken After a time, however, his) laughter ceased, and his troubles came: ‘ceonndtnee on lim again, He drank his coffee, shed away the food which was before Fim. and looked thro: the peus for the Jatest report about the murder case, What he read made his cheek tum shade paler than before. He could f Is heart thumping wily, “They've were a cll ie, ‘have they?” he muttered, rising and pacing restloan~ y and down, "T wonder what it ? 1 threw eye man off pact night: but If he pu: ite me, there will be no aiimoutty Tp in his finding where I live. Vhat nonsense am talking. -T am mathe hb ot if owh morbid imagination, Thére ta jaine bie Oe, connect me with the crime, sot be afrald of my own shadriw, I've a good mind to leave town for @ time. bat that would excite suspicion, Oh, Renee, ae darling!” he cried, passiona ea “ee you only knew what I quffei now (hat you would pity me, but a ral ‘er know the truth—never! never! And sinking into a chair by Be. wipe dow he covered hia face ‘with his hat that drops of perspiration were standing! To Be Continued,) Grand Opera | ry 01, LL, now that the opera gen- WV" pon Is over it's going to ben hard time for the hissers,” commented the Pessimist, ‘Tf they would only fadé away from Inertia it would be a good thing for the com- munity. “There's nothing more obnoxious and rating on one's nerves than to have a bunch of these Iman geese get to work in the middle of an opera, Their pluoft is that they are true lovera of art and want to down. the unthinking denecrators of the shrine of music, but {t's a two-to-one chance) that the people they are hissing at don't create half the disturbance they do themeelves, “It anything develops nervous tu have this pepoltetine hiss | d | Once a clerk who read hard every da; Saw in print: “Iocan double your pay Then he studied each night, TUL he Jost his Job quite, ; Now be don't carn & cent, 6 they say. By Alice Rohe. |'There's poor old Tolstol; how unwire | Let every man he chlorofonmea when and Hisses, Poured Into your eara when your soul, tia f soaring somewhere on an outburst of Wagnerlan discord.” “But they never hi except when inconsiderate people disturb everybody in the houre.”" sald the Amateur Phil osophef, "Oh, they don't, don't they,” snapped the Pessimist, “That's jist wht you're off. They hiss whenever they Are personally’ Annoyed, and they don't } care how much they end cold chill running up and down the marrow hone of overy one else in the house, "Now, I'm against there peste. who go to the onera and chatter, but f don't know of anything that spuils a pers formance more than to have @ wave of hissing submerge the whole audience. A local commotion disturbs one part: of the house, but where {a there an exca from the nervesrackin, Insidious nati of che hisser, "It" oniv rome hie would ‘ha season. to ae during the summei seuninate the hisning enthuriasts . i¢ he poraiile to eo to an opera Ai nd all about yorrre of true art andy sents so far un in the alr that nothing” | hort of mania att earry you up,” fotlbactbe tS Ms The Uselessness of Old Men, * C k OME, let us Kill the olf men off, they're only in the way: The young men are the ones we neeed and they alone should away, and mean his actions are Compared with those of Nicholas, the glorious young Czar, he has reached threo-svore, He thas no right to linger ‘on, hts tisee fulness is o'er; How grand the world might be to-day If Gladstone, ‘Tennyson, |Grim Blamarck and great Hugo all had dled at forty-one, ' ‘Turn out the fossils! Give the boys @ chance to write and rule: A man at fifty is no man—he's but @ 44 headatrong fool, ‘There England trails away béhind—her ruler's old, poor thing! But see how Spainylooms ‘at the front with her sublime byte | King.