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st = =) = .— 3 i] = = SQ. AND ST. GZORGE CHURCH STUYVESA! AND QUAKER SCHOOLS HIB is awful,” complained the Amateur Philosopher. ‘Here they've arreste’ a woman and examining hee as to Ler sanity Just Be we objected to her husband | ing the papers at the broakfast) Ne. It's a shame! Men go too far ¢ habit.” multi hud a good excuse,” the Pessimist, “You don't. Tow what he hal w st opposite to et the breakfast vole. A newspapers @ mighty handy thing to have around. , however, regard the newspaper jes their natural enemy, but ite a haven of refuge. menow. don't you go to feeling sorry the women because ther husbands | qead the papers, The line of conver. @ation the average man has banded @4t to him over the bacon and eggs @ whole f@mned loose. ‘object aly’ ae threw a fork at him and | agra eye for reading purposes. I don't aavisate violent measures, eh for thi ; newspaper, habit, na, pertect| (80 2ND, AVE. Hits tho averuge man. He reads| PRESIDENT BUCHANANS h 2 OLD HOUSE + The Thoroughfare That Peter Stuyvesant Loved ls Still Rich in Lands } gitHfe wouldn't have a chance anyway," » titerposed te Pessimise, “He reads it on the way down fwn'— -"¥es, when his “@f their sockets as sho is doing his dano- PLENTY OF SCHOOL oe aren't jerked + GIRLS WITM BOOK CASES. OTTLARKSCNURGH STUYVESANT ST.AND 2ND. AVE (7 2ND.AVE. | fag stunt, the sirap-hanyers’ ‘deux! marks of the Early Days | fonaty catioa the section now inciuding jcon and other colebrities have occupied) third atreet, have died out or moved the Bowery and lower Second avenue, | It during the past decade, and Prealdent! away to join the more garish "40" When It Was the jome| there tho ota Governor died, after tne | Roosevelt was a frequent and honored) whom their fathers despised a9 up- HUM ihie bite, He reads si atTunch, English invader had practically omsned | euest there. starte, a fow descendants of the an @ . of Manhattan’s Wealth and Fashion, Dutch rule in New York, His bones ilo | jn vhe vaults of St. Mark's Churen, at Stuyvesant street and Second avenue. On the flat gray tombstonos tn the old fends it going home, he reads it all ‘Though the old families, whose man- | ise, No wonder the women ob- sions once lined both #ldas of the great thoroughfare from Houston to Seventy. | In ind st are the branches ested: olant regime stil ocoupy the ancestri homes of the neighborhood. Prominent of ABPRESENT AND PAST the Than is often driven wopaber Mt of pees self-pro- there are aines| ECOND avenue te perhaps the en ‘ About THs Gea the era | IS only etreet \in’ Manhattan which | old Duteh confreres, 01 the leak in the hot-water pipes | can boast to an avernge of at) Ip was from this graveyard tn 1879 os to watsfy One's Intellectual Cray-|jeast one. historic association to the|that the body of A, 1. Stewart was | I think it hae been carrled block, Also of more children at play| stolen by night and held for heavy ran: te, EG ht Its broad pavements and asphalt| som, %, than in almost any other dis- tf A little farther up the avenue on the Pon dreakagt tabier and ‘all fe Wer leit of the olty, The hiatoric aasocl- | opposite side Ie a stately brown-stone unt of a newspaper. ations’ date back from the days, when|manaion with a Uttle tron balcony in| AR, fo woinan ever gues crazy | fs ‘her hushand Won't tain’? ante Metered 1Seans avenue wus the home of New /front of tte first floor "It vou werd imarried you |*°" know that muoh, |rocle’ a the A Mode:n Novel, iy church's tiny triangulir graveyard chiselled the names of many of his ment with to-day's Evening World, The correct ans’ Monroe, 1817-1825; Rutherford B, Hayes, 1877-1881, The prize winners were: |» Windows and| ultra-exclusive and fashionable | rusted: pedestals, where leone once ‘Ihe children are products of | jrred, ‘This was the home of Presl- countless narrow * cross streets, dent James Buchanan, and from iis bal-! tenements and tramc leave little | cony ho addressed the cheering orowd |ro:m for play, and where the young- & First Prize—{5. Second Prize—$3. GEORGE L, WELP, BRUCE BER! No. $10 Willoughby Avenne, No, 106 West 105th Street, East One Hundred and Fifth strect, New York City. present City Hall) and retired to his shady financial ment-house, jeala. Col, It js now an apart- Waring, Selden Ba- The Mystery ofa Hansom é Hor n maiden Rama restcred by law. “ipweeuly Bouerle farm," an he ab, ‘My father: WCopyright, 1004, Abknotl® National Press jowover, for it was very ‘acon ‘thrown ts LG, Sal, with a eudden terror, drew find but, snatching the ing @ note to his clerk with the sroom, —— on the table with a look of disgust, and ; table, she thrust them Ini and jo 7 poe a i “For heaven's aake, no!" she cried. | a ¢ Went Gown; to the Bt. 1Glda with (#YNOPSIS OF PRECEDING cHAPTuns, [rising from her seat Madre waiked up| Tut i wen too late; Madge had caught gpa they Gales oid tor oe weryaiew | Fitegerald. On arrival they found the ayer Way eet bedtupittyes ately and down the room and wished ‘some sieht of the nam the pap ‘Mar | wild me hurain to find | whole house perfectly quiet and orderly, rable ka let good fairy would hint to Brian that he Hage -omeane. Moure<H elaedla el Sh aa “Prettiby. the millionaire, lying owing to the excellent management of A eee he tks! Was wanted. If man, Isa gregariouw|apon her, There were the papers Ho: | hes tathera ceteeee ye aime t-slde | sat Rawlins, She had taken the com- oF fie sauder, Sead ng fi ‘a “a'lesiet | animal, how much inore, then, is a|sanna Mooro had handed 0" Whyte. mand in everything, and although the ie him to ® AYIBE) woman? ‘his. {# not a conundrum, but | Whyte hed been murdered by the man pervants, Knowing , her asitecodanta, Nene siya that a mentieman!n simple truth, ‘A female Robinson |'°.4nPM the papers were, of value, CHAPTER XXXV. ' uve at hull TBh more socindle, and a A Calton ignnthrope, led orv fell dead on Gute ro, of last week's President Puzzlo were as fo! tral avenue, East Orange, N, J. MILTON M. BERRICK, JR., ed to resent her doing so, they amived they could not help ex- The “Winners 0 of President Puzzle Prizes. The President Puzzle for this week will be found on the third page of the Sherlock Holmes color supple- lows: James A, Garfield, 1881; BARL L, WENDOVER, No, 21 Cumberland Street, (From the fan Francisco Call.) IERtRAN SCHR OdeE ana ianiOroWasd [Ruta iA oR ont He rmuRE ceria colec: ASSOIM BN TY New Fork Clty, Brooklyn, N. Y. . CHAPTER 1. Javenue as to a havun of ploaeure. ties @ BO rrr nd On The Hesitiogt Birl you ever saw. If ghosts walk outside dramatic cir-| Nearly opnositeat: No. 376 lew nkawas| Ten other prizee of $1 each were awarded as follows: Bea RT ities er pa CaM OM Peter Stuyverant's eoleit MU |gtone and. brick commer house, with| BLANCHE PRUSCHRU, No, 125| CHARLES DOBRLICH, No, 910 Bast Tenth streat, N. W., Wash- CHAPTER 111, thy, Gardclentes, Wary old Dutch: & | black iron balconies and auaint man-| West One Hundred and Sixth street,| Stockton street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ington, 0, C, A wedding grand without a flaw, Jerry and to his descendants the dis- BAS OE Ne oe the sev-| New York City, AMELIA SCHAEFER, Naegell’s| JACOI BLUM, No. 261 Bast Broad- ee na earn lato! AM joie ones its eariieht ANS iat fame: | frequent resort of the beauty and tash-| MARY CURRY, No, 312 Ciasson| Hotel, Hudson and Third streets, | way, New York City, ag “1m roto b3°k home to my man | omen he tet New Tork Clty (wae |bought it, and thirty-five vears ago lt] | WITLLIAM GOLDFARB, No, 165| ESTELLE CLARK, No, 458 Con-| wood street, Stamford, Conn. No.| Gould street, Newport, R. L J» By managed things, Calton to Fitzgerald. position think her.’’ Chinston entered the room, nly’ mn | Crusoe,” says a writer who prided him-| She staggered blindly forward, and } t aitch were her administrative pow- | was very gruve, and Fitsgerald looked RE SaAARe aie elt upon being a Keen observer of | hen. with, one pleroing shriek ath to HUSH MONEY. ora and strong will, that they obeyed {at him in alarm, ina human nature—"a female Robin: n doing, #0, abe atrus \- 5 5 p awilng, teilk Calton that she ean | Crusoe would liave gone mad for want |Bxalnat her father. who was still f hit outing inser oe tally her implicitly, Mark FrettIby's body | (‘Madge—Miss Frettiby t"" he faltered. Tle sake ‘Madge to mary dine gid | Of something to talk to,’ This remark, |ing beside the table. Awakened rt bb ch announced the death | haq ‘been taken up to his bedroom. | ‘Is very ill,” replied the doctor; “has a on yimizalia. ' Bhe Congentss sa eotive though novere, chovertneleas contuins Genty With that wild, ory in hia ease, of Mark Frettlby he put on his | Madge had been put to bed and Dr, |an attack of brain fever. I can’t an- f hart in affecte several grains of truih, for women as uh eyes wide, put out feeble | hat, stepped into Calton’: t @ * " 7 iy mara Calton he suspects Roxer More-|q rule, talk more than’ men, ‘They are pen ay AS if to Keep something back | grove along to the St. Klas Pipeoty in| ciinston and) Brian sent for. When APRN Eek ta A ey ries hat o pe ateeucaen ott | th upite uf dustin ‘MoCarthy's, te ane | the for bealde his daughter. Sal, hor-| Flinders street with that gentleman. | pressing thelr admiration at the cap- , hes id (hot “Bal ftawilua is” his ehitd, Known-at least In elvillzed commun- | For-struck, did not lone her preserice of | There Calton dismissed hla trap, send: | Ital way ties, oe ig peek i Hf calls on Madge. While he is Miss Frettlby, being neither miean- ‘i a fe Anther has a vieltor who la takeh) eioic nor dumb, began to long for ” rhe Vieitor: Re er Moreland, leaves Frettl-|pomeone to talk to, and, ringing tl 3 1 br, ferent, Min hell, ordered Sal to be sent in, The two Braid tevin Calton that RASS ahat girls had become great friends, ane a Madge, though by two years the GB hele ie ear Kiar Rerttiby Turdersd younger, assumed the role of «mentor, wir io obtain, Rosanna marriage /and under her guidance Sol was rapidly ' toate, Taragiad ing. t wes a range ny ol bas the Frettlby writ: confession, oh brought fomecher these two children. ot the game’ ether, each, with CHAPTER XXXIV. wer divorce his first wife, ani Bia Hawn, tnd’ not Madge te hia such different histories—the one reared in luxury and affluence, never having a o— RY Sas x Known want; the other dragged up In aie the unter si) unsexed and Deemirshed ' y the lite that ehe \ ' Ome 9718 whirlies of time brings. In iter Of course she was laughed at—people| vengos."" and it’ was tne last thing, in 4 who believe in presentiments generally ark Frettlby wou vi 4 thought, of seeing—R Moore's " * he awked, * g mot : Varo—but, nevertheless, she held firmly thous of ieeing Romane ieetne| We May Equal the Japs. Who 1s John T. MoCallt’ he asked. ‘I don't care| the mother, MR, JEROME waa talking to "OW Wicked he lat Kyen'he qgn be savedt!: a distingulened Japanese who) His Son’ Got Extravagant, recently visited the metropolis, | In course of conversation tho) IRVING BACHELLER, the) 9 to her opinion. ; ‘Mr. Frettiby went to bed early that might, the excitement of the Inst few @ays and tho feverish, galety in which same roof as his daughter Madge, On rocelving Madge's message Sal came to the drawing-room, and the two wero snon chatting amieably togetih: ‘The room was almost in darkness, on "| Wohel. { e " ' : author, recently visited hig old! ' hnd lately indulged proving too}one lainp being lighted, Mr, Frettlby District-Attorney std: y nt Thiele aoonerst if very senalbly detested gna. with ite “Woat 1s your opinion of the | home ‘up the State axl hed a! phmtrons for him. No sooner had he lala) eiciing light, and had “nothing but Ameri ler chat with one of the farmers in | lamps In his drawing-room, At one end American’ peop! iis head on his pillow than he dropped Poft to sleep at once and forgot in placid the village, “T think they are the great: | “How $6 your ‘son: getting | of the apartment there was a small with: ny rn tale. Gn lt stood a large lam) est and most progressive nation | Cela a ad and worrles of his |!" opatiue globe, whtoh, having. shade T have tier dnt ay tenet tes along?” inquired Mr. Dachellet. ’ q dyer it, threw a'soft ang subdued oircle ‘ 2 0 i h Tt was only 9 o'clock, so Madge stayed [of iight pound the lable, leaving the| Pied tne almond-eyed son of the Orient, ‘Indeed, if ‘Wall, he's gittin' pesky ex: by herself in the great drawing-room | fest of the tom In a. kdnd of semi-| thelr development continues at the present rate, It fagant,” replied the tiller of, “ané read a new novel, which wae tnen (wrreners., Near this set Madge and) will: not be many centuries before they may be en-)'—™ the wall, Ever since he started | ¥ ' th sally, and away on the! ttlod to be called the Japanese of the West.’ courtin’ vie's been reokleaa with. money." ide they could see the door en find « warm food of light pouring in, from the ha A talking together for i serenting a sensation, called ‘Sweet Vio- Yet Eyes.’ It belied its reputation, Jeft-hand “Why, what has he, been doling?" asked the author, | “Doin'? Why, the latest ding-dong nonsense of hia | mood, {9 to go to town and squnndef a whole quarter on a) And the solemn little man from the Mikado's island empire never blinked an eyelid, while Mr, Jeromo| nervously rolled a cigurette, tet teen JOHN T..M'CALL was employ. | Af the Ghost Should Ran. \ “HERE'S a! riew one," the town was built around it, | When persons connected with) hia wite the other morn-| yy, fh, oe inlayavent Starts to-morrow, | weary | body rise iH from ped a sults were wanted in the court-| ing: ‘The ghost walks to- iy | Ia, drawin into the shadow,|room the Sheriff would put his nead out of the win= day. ated breath he| dow and call them three times, “A few minutes Inter eI ( Ny eS {he room. Ine fev) rt was in the eummer time when Mr, MeCail visited | bia daughter Erne! asked hoiselesaly’ along, he | the place, A branch of the Salvation Army had rafard for an explanation of thie to Inid the ps arried a the table.|a tent on one side*of the square and was holiing| statement, and her moth- or mala: My) ‘Your papa used @ slang phrase for ‘tolling ‘me it ia) They were th a large blue envelope — SUE GF much worn, with writing ink on Men—Women—Boys—Gitls 1K, “Sal zed Jt at once pe the one a tn the will be made through the \ d_geon {n ‘the possession of the meetings morning, afternoon and evening. | One morning a minister made an unusually earnest | address, calling sinners to repentance. “Name the man‘" he cried, "Name the man who| tm too wicked to be saved!" Sead womai, und with an. instinetive that there was something wrong, | we Wi ? she tried to draw Madge back ag ahe tehed fathe with At that moment the Sheriff thrust his head out of! unday orld ’s Tensity. of Toattng” ‘whith, held Ne UE°| the court-house window nnd shouted: “John T, Me-| ford tt.’ WwW t Di ts wi one neat by, can tie Jory on ‘| Gani John T, McCall! John T, MoCall!"’ “But he eald the shoet would walk’ poratated the}: an trectory. Bee rap sarbich be Yellen ‘The minister was somewhat startled vy this «eem-| child. table. bent Servant to ese! ingly prompt repty to tie “aX dn he am ant “'Oh, how I do wish that ghost would run,’ Gov. the dissertation the whom . expressed ception, Approaching the epeaker, he said: "Pardon, mo, Profesosr,, but I thought 1 was going . when quick ear caught ' night.!” ne #0 teeth-brush! The first thing 1 know ‘he 1 be buyin’) to hear something brand-new to-nig! SUT ees a ri Nguread.| Not Too Wicked to Be Saved. F ‘set of store tepth.’” “Why, didn't you Ike my lecture?” aeked the cing down the room, Madge saw it, LAWYER AND ALDERMAN epenker: Art Thou the Man? || sit ‘ated up ty arprise-on eg” "Oh, I ain't got no kok comin’, but that piece you nizing her father, He wae clothed In tated Rul “There 1s a tide in the affairs of dvessing-x and carried some 4 Saat (Cems rnc Bee inh anid John O'Brien, the) were falkin’ about te Ube AePOREW ot old) things. men, which, taken at the flood, leads uM 4 z je han Mayor's Becrotary, to a| WY Ive heard my grin er Bi 3 on to Fortune.”—Shakespeare. iO Madger/thimurpriae, Wee fale 18 8 cout ae | eee er paidecmen, wan tose shart sayin's many @ time! ‘Talk about chen’ . whispered, Sal, grasping her Ape eo uticn ia ne ap a aN employed! of the Béldge| Mute Wells's T evar ywrlle& play, I bet you'll hear The Flood Tide e's aa ani | employes Of the BAS, somethin’ new. anyhow, ; Carnegie Missed Dyspepsia, ANDREW CAR so} phyalclan said; young man. All you haye_to each meal. Just try it James —_—ooooreeeeews @ Third Prize—$2.° MARIE A, J, O'CONNOR, No, 39 “She's a clever girl, that,” whispered “Curfous thing phe should have taken up her proper in her father's house, Fate fe a deut cleverer that we mortals Brian was about to reply when Dr. His (ace jot the doctor in a dazed sort of way, in which Sal Rawlins had | Madge dangerously {ll—perhaps dying, aid! ‘Then I'd surely get that pony and cart.’ Knew Old Saws When He Heard Them. HIGGINS recently at: tended a lecture on Hamlet’’ in his native town, At the close of to ti lecturer ha was surrounded by. a crowd of admirers of Shakespeare, all of themselves greatly pleased,’ with one ‘ex- ‘This was a man who seemed in rather a pessimistic many years before ihe began to give "You don’t need my Lorie = yen! ia to Mugh heartily Gefore a1 ry after toric IOUS Linger in Second Avenue. neneneenene Peentmeneneno | Stuyvesants , the ‘Rutherfurds, the | Webers and the Keteltos. Second avenue is rapidly becoming & street of Institutions. Hospitals, homes, \braries, are strewn thickly on elther side. Where stately bellos and beaux promenaded in the early 59's, the poor are now elucated and healed, Stuyvesant Square, too, though ati surrounded by many of the wombre mansions of long ago, is largely given Over to tho children and tired workers of tho east sido, who find In its broad acres and under its aide trees the life- wiving air and recreation they so sadly need, due tothe efforts of ‘i Byening World, years ago, that the gates of this pleasure ground were (hrown unteotrictedly open ot all times to the veople, At the northwest corner of the square stands fashionable St, George's hurch any ay t acjoining it tie prim, red and ©. Philadelphia architectures Of the Quaker School! occupies the re- Mainder of pie ile ‘Here and ti move modern wtructures, ail along. the course of the evenue, from the square south, some of the anctone: ones spay, StI be geen; post som | remnant of the Old Guard, ‘nopelesaly Aetying the Irresistible ‘onrush — of ‘Twentieth Century progres: How to Care for the Hair. OTHERS shoul teach their girlie to care for their hair as early a possible. If a girl is coaxed into the habit of giving her locks a hundred strokes with a clean brush every morn- ing and every evening and braiding them loosely for bed, the foundation for @ future beautiful head of hair will be laid. Too many children are allowed to go to bed with thelr hair in a tausled condition, only to have it jerked and tangled hast!!y when sohool time comes round. Such a@ practice is disastrous to the verves of a sensitive child and ruin- ous to the hair. Never allow one ohild to use the others hairbrush, Fergus ‘What if she were to die and he to lose the true-hearted woman who stood #0 nobly by him in his trouble? “Cheer up," sad Chinston, patting him on the shoulder, “While there's life there's hope, and whatever human ald can do to save her will be done, raaped the doctor's hand heart being too full eit w Gd Brettiby die?’ asked Cal- aid Chinston, very much affected, as I dis- red a weak or #o ago. Lt appears ng in hiw sivep. and ente: -room, he alarmed Miss have him, He awoke suddenly und the natural ’ consequences followed, Arppped down den tn to tan, in a low vol an ina low voles, covering bie face rhe sist of her father walking bu ttonin; na ne ough tn suppone,” ald Chinston Bh took laaue anaTe i 00K ‘place indirect har abontnty Sxee the brain fines Frettlby is not re yrettiby te not the woma “knowing as ‘@ must a0} man will tell you all said At i wh aia esta nosaing toward 6 was Avs and since then tar Cae on Hata ti with Galton and Pitegerald. ‘ieep up |" my boy TH. pull her fi the doctor had gone Calton sumed sharply to 8 Blood wasting Yo bo addressed, baie he wafa, ivakly, ou MK martiod Mise Hretiuy a fe answered, quiatl as in the drawing-room. when Mt, the nalked Calton, in 1 as ho and Vitagenald taowed wer up une, mir’ she said, wh had entered the study and ‘ane. iveked the door, 'T don't want but yourselves to know what they hag on Y tent yo “More mystery," muttered Caltan, as ‘he glanced at Brian, and took his seat ft the enerttalre, C rotiiby went to, bed earty ‘Jase night,” said Sal, calm}; *) Macgo and t were talking. tomoohien it the drawing-room when he enterad. walking In his sleep, and carrying wome toh oth ‘Galton and Rene eae ‘tarted, hati ie latter grow pale. fe came down the room, and rite | the t ble wh iS one Madge bent fo) 'd bo aa, aed to atop. her @ wave A Bort and fell on aye ier. Tn doing #0, ened er father, He figd, solemn | onia| © ©} aj, with a acorn, * alarmed Miss Frettiby?" asked | poo Freviby’ sits ‘but we had better go up |o! Should a Husband Ever Lie? Is a husband ever jus- tified in lying to his wife? If so, when? For the best answer in 160 words or less The Evening World will give a priae of $% in gold; for the, second bert, $3, and for the third best, $2. Address answers to “Domestic Dilemma iter, Evening World, Now York City, P, O, Box ii | Sometimes, Says a Little Girl. ‘THINK o husband fe Justified in lying I in the following case: If his wite }S (s, very 11 and inquires for the health of some dear friend or relative who hed died recently and her hus- band replies that they fire in good health, I think this is all eight, es the sad news might result in her death I am @ Kittle girl eleven years old. MARY B, WHALEN, Spring Valley, ©. Atways Tell the Truth. ORE ie no good, true and loving wife who will not gladly accept | the truth preferable to “the Me from ther husband. While It may caus: her sometimes great anxiety ‘whe pal forgive," tvut she can mover redeem bor: confidence. Always the crurtn, La WwW Stick to the Truth. F's wives who have found thee Ifusbands truthful from ‘the first honeymoon day will at any time doubt hia word; but if on the other hand she finds that he Is given to preverica- tlon he will find ft hard to convinoe her when he Is really telling the truth, A husband is never, under any oiroume stances, justified in lying tc his wife Toll her the truth and atick to it, and {f domestic infolicities aries the truth will form a better foundation for them than a lle, LUCY BREWSTER, New Roohelle, N, ¥, Lie to a Liar. A HUSBAND fs perfectly Sustified in lying to lis wite—provided she is ether a fibber or a do- moatic virago, and does not believe any> thing except what she sees and heare herself. or when it would prove harm- ful for his wife to be told the truth. If 9 man’s wife js truthful then le ought to be ¢ruthful also R. BLACK. Lie About Her Looks. BELIEVE a husband js justified in I lying to ‘his wife when it will make her -heart light and cause no one harm, A husband's first duty és to look after the ppiness of hia wifs, who may not be beautiful of feature or complexion, The fact remaina, howe’ The time comes when with feminine scumoaity she wishes to know if she appears to as good advantage as her more favored misters. mo she sete asia the question of her loving hi band, who Is bound to aay “yes,” that in Ie eyes whe is unexce! +, e Hume. “I could hardly help knowing,’ answered; ‘it proves that ito: Moore was Mr, F'rettlby's wife, and'"'— ahe hesitated “Go on,” seid Brian, in a harsh tone, looking up. “And they were the papers she gave Mr, Whyte,” lent for a moment, and then looked up with a flush, Kk Kolng to she said, indignantly, recurring r Bourke street slang In the exs cltement of the moment, "I know what you know, but I'll be as alient as the said Brinn fervently, 1 know vou jove het eothie Cersiie peaiee!? ‘un, ¢ would,” said fier her iting. ne to round on HOUE a friend. oF lea quickly, It was plain Sal was quite ignorant that Ro- na Moore was her mother, So mien hank you taking her har {00 well to be: “I would be an out of the gutrer, ciel Hike me. f|the better; they would keep jher fy) lee horance—perhnaps not altogether, but it me be folly to Undecelve her & At prose goin’ £0 gn to hea mi ty it not Tot any one in bat myeel| saying she left the room. thy bread upon Calton, oracularly, len ans vquall fares’ even "han indenty," age iatd m are D Pe answer Bit " darting Ting match unto ent ay | 1 th Ao nothin: HON, beg your wna ma raid, carte tn Feontuntone og vit pose the will muat be read, and all sort of thing’ Yor, f the execu net then others if and Let tg tothe —Eu! look nn ee that a i se Atala Lilie Hed Bi a thu ett te omy and then he turned suas ti Ww. Suddenly Gatton gave wen) exclamation of surorise, toners ty” ert th a 7 art Sen th oe 0 inrer. OR aa HR ce) Eiitertions lone!” and and ar i el se mecpnnicallye hin” mn eprang . Bo at lant. the tery wan to be ol wpe ip Thee Mente a ae cont Sor the. pees OUR pro tonya ead et re reed ee igonmly answored the barrister. ‘Tam ed ‘Calton, un> away llbraries was troubled anawer, “but: produc! with dyspopsta.’ After ‘he told | then pocket; “tata them fn’ Ms his trouble to @| doctor, tho ana ent forward ean ey Reis tho AL thf ashy in nen nee Rose h iat an exolnmatt ate ee fente Wh: tet iiston t ee Wt