The evening world. Newspaper, July 27, 1907, Page 9

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1907; “Magazine, Saturday, Vo ty 215 — e Eveni a's “the young. merchant hurried to bis fashion. gazed with open-eyed joy over the majestic beauty of . Manhattan) office, Altting down at -hte-desk hej | Island, rising on every side above the| wrote out a check for $271,462.00, en- snowy marble sea wall that girt its veloped, dirgcted and mailed tt. Then he called jn bis manager, an shores. | For {n 1927, at the date of this story’s/ opening, the wilderness of piers, water- | aldo slums, and filthy thorSughtares | that had fringed the island in eariler days had long since been removed to a) Mimtrict set apart for them atong the| shores of Gravesend Bay, Jeaving New| York « cky whose classic beauty | amazed and delighted every foreigner | who sailed up the villa-lined bay to the| elderly Armenian. 8 “I am Insolvent,” he aid tn dull de- spair. “I have just pai out almost | every dollar I have in the world. Close | down the works and let the creditors | Nght It out among them.'! | The manager took the news with no Xpreseion of surprise. -He-was ho more amazed than would be the peat- house. inmate who hears that angther jamall-pox patient han died, | | metropolis. | | ‘The land of the freel" repeated | "My sympathy $s all with you, atr,'t | Feridah. ‘‘And to think that lead than | | Raid he. are wiae. Poverty ts furtive look that had no seeming place I Fone) taqnth ago be was in Macedonia | | vetter than death. Have you reed that le where every Armenian lives on suffer |Hilronymua Axtion. of: Axtion & Co., : Bunce, victim to the newest cruel whim | was found strangled this morning? It } of our Turkish masters. Now, hére'-—| as only lase week he’ told me that 4 as = Her companion, a tal, curly hatred ‘should he ever recely i | <r youth of perhaps twenty-five, had ANeuas retunettel pay Tiseation hareeae | r ; ; Ustened. with scant enthuslasm to the b eins no lt 4 } Reality ToMorrow’s © ; 4 confident’ the. police and laws’ of tho 4 ay'S - girl's raptures. He had a haggard, United States would amply protect him." fi SR + } | ! iid amply protect him Yes'erday’s Romance To-Day’s a i A.tlerk entered, bearing a note, | } { ‘In 80 young and #6 prosperous a man, * Sire ‘ ‘ Left by hand, sir, ten minutes ago,” Be He interrupted. Feri i id Hea | 4 OMAN j | He, wer dah’ rhapsody, sald’ he.’ “i dldm't know. you were here (24 ality { I" he mi i : ; - No Re uttered. ‘There are no Petroa broke tha ‘seal fearlessly. al-| <> Y urkish bands here to sweep down on though, he recognized the peculiar, deil- | © : G z the town and burn, murder and pillage. But there arg worse menaces than brig- ands who attack in broad daylight.” cato stationery pany, Ltd. of the Assassins’ Com- Ho had paid his ransom | With Infinite ‘gentleness. hy whispered "I love you, Feridah, heart's darling! @ Tl look nd had no more to dread, Truly, «9 F 4 | An eile oA ge abies) astetaule {the manager had sald. poverty waa| He lafd his left hand tenderly across | A etaala Mbt houghtavoutwould bet cele better thaa death, Petros had nover| the girl's lovely eyes. ‘Then, with his i 5 hb ; ney! 0 eo fully realized it before. Then he| Tht ho drew from his coat a revolver! Sassin +, | #84 to seo me, When you Intt home read’ and shot her dead } five years ago to enter your uncle bay, ie he eat a : We rearet extremely that your T loved her,’ he eald oriei pe | : New York counting house you sald reteiious ponduct i xoeking to | aunt and the servants mae oMal 4 you would know no happy moment till PECADE Your OO ea om Sndiy | bY the-report “and it ra ie Sere f to add $40,000 to your bill. indly @ only; you were rich enough to tend for ma saya Miss Bedrosian annoyance by |wny to eave her. I" remitting before 3 i’. M. to-day.” to come here and be your wife, Now that your uncle has died and you are There was a whirr at the telephone/ It was 4 o'clook whon Petros reached | bell. Involuntartly, in the apathy of his i Y his heir and I am here, I should bome For five hours he had been|grief, Petros picked up the receiver. ; ; ruahing from friend to friend seeking| A monotonous, colorless volce at the’ ; ° broke {n, Petros. ‘My unole to raise money. But as was already|other end spoke as though from @ _ ‘phonograph: “(The Company. learns you are bankrupt and will therefore —-sankrupt;—amd—xs—no—man—knew—hor soon he himself would be called upon for every dollar he could raise, the quest had deen fruitless. te indeed dead! ‘Of apoplexy, } "Oot apoplexy administered by And how did die so the papera said.” | the “The Company Is Very merciful,” He Said. Company!" 3 “TheCompany?: "she echoed, “What -mtinculvely he raised one Nund to Kusrd) dah, noting her sweetheart's terror, fiancee's lools vof utten bewilderment; “télegram for you, afr.” ‘Ha half expected 16 find Feridah| give you @ year to raise the \ Se jhis face, Am he did an arm flashed But Petros made no reply. He was{ ‘and you called this the ‘land of the With #haking hands Petros tore open | already Kone. But she weg at the door #50, 000.7” Tt 1s our modern New York equiva-| oat of the hansom, thrust a paper into|acanning, with glazed eyes, a note in| fre.’ This letter shows how much | the envelope and read: to xreet him, and in her face shone a| oe) se tell trom the ; _ lent for Turka fn Armenta. You'll un-| his hang and was gone before he could hand. freedom we have. The A in Com- “Petros Alena, Fugitive, White | world of love and wolcome that trane-}_ 1) 9) magia 4] j figured It “Come and seo my wedding dresa!™ she oried gleefully. Star Line Pier: Ins death at sea He looked from the » ‘Easier Than Death on Land? etait oo! A. Co, huddled knot of soared servants at Lain ‘pany holdn every wealthy New Yorker [by the throat. As far back aa 1907 they began operations, calling them- derstand soon enough, He was handing Ferldah into his car realize what hed happened. Dazed, dumb with horror, She glanced familiarly over his shoul- Petros|der and read the following grotesquely Aad! riage as he epoke. Ils words Were reeled into hls carriago and sank down bustnessiike and commonplace ecpistle: - THIS ts the land of the|cut short by the passing of a swift| beside Feridah on broad ne} oP, 2 selves the Hunchakists, and levied | Quaking, bent over like an old man,| Petros caught her in his arms.) Then last of all, et the ; 4 ees electric’ Hansom, which whizzed so close| coachman touched vale Rerseekna aaa eee Reeswaciiers with regret |blackmall on rich Armenians. If a m8) Petros returned to the carriage and| pressed her slender, girlish form con- Cae yet en errand Cert ton w 4 Ferldah Bedrosian, slender,| to the young man to force him to’! vehicle whirled out of West street. ve of your esteemed uncle's death. We |refused to pay, he died, and by # We with the terrified Feridah drove home-|vuletvely to’ him and sree hee said, in a frightened, piste Posed aiert, gloriourly beautiful in|ehrink back against the wheels of his| Chambers, toward Broadway. ting note with sorrow the fact that |rible ‘time stamp’ system every 9% Ha | Tice mnere. | placing | the wir -ta care | Bepoy, deautlul, face Ww eed of voice as be pressed the pistol barrel i her own awarthy, Levantine| own vehicle to escape collision. In-! “What {a the matter?’ asked Ferl-|° he omitted to send us the negotiable intended victim was notified of th] o¢ nig aunt, who kept house for him,| kisses, Then, putting her from against his own chest. i murder and of what was to be his RS. WALTON was — “he Girl Wins. as to have helped with the dinner, but at the last moment her sister was taken iI! and Madge was The hoodoo pursued her, ears strained for the sound of the | door bell she tried to hurry the dinner. | | Already Jack-win ten minatey Yate, and} |for once she breathed a fervent prayer! and with) By Carrle Claxton. i) "m glad of it," he said, proniptly, though his eyes twinkled. "You sce I was too excited to eat while Mr, Lane| was talking and I'm just dying to take| you out to a restaurant and celuurate { | | drafts for $150.00 which we requested three days before his unfortunate de- His cousin, Thomous Kalptan, after neglecting to make tribution to our patriotic fund “Do you care to make good the combined Indebtedness of the two? If no, the sum, with compound tnter- est, x just $271.482'50. A check for t sun, payable to bearer, -and mailed direct to our Association, will absolve you from further present lia- bility. The usual three days’ grace own fate. The police were powerless to oope with the situation. tleth Century New York !s aa muoh under their awful sway as was olden Venice under that of the mediaeval assassin bands..No recipient of such | a letter as this, nowadays, dare ex- | pose the aasassins, for worse than | death would be his portion, And now they threaten YOU—not ME—unless I pay. Wait! ‘There {s one hope. There fs a White Star liner sailing in half 5 | mise. i | it are Mect aright, died In simil. ‘This incompetence made the Hun- Th M A Dinner Engagement. lca ween twotsennaages “immediately | soakiete neo ee by io GY é Tissue-Paper an. By William H. Osborne. HB maid knocked gently upon Miss Catherwood's door anc handed in a card. Miss Cath- erwood fooked at it .and tossed it to the floor. ” embarrassed—and there wae good ree won for it, For Mr. Anthony Waser worth was there for a purpose, and his Purpose ‘Witimataly! became apparent, He was there to propose to Miss Cath- erwood, and he proposed. The Pian Wins. | ors sit termi’ of him down. (io Mr. Wadeworth raised his he igh in the Suddenis he 2 direc! inte, the oe ed left to her own resources ¥ that he would be ve late, as she ” 1s allowed you. “The dickens!” reiterateq Miss Cath- then he red. e tul ach small sevledne a8 oe Reece titan ki Apt petty ee ine i iprever style pallies comes peas “Respectfully, an hour. Let un xo straight avon erwond, “T suppose I phali have to see| ‘"Don't—don't give me your answer -|away and apparently forgot her sone king. echool.hed. ender ~ aiin the hove that {t might dry up the | You didn’ cf ‘The Avtasn Company (Lta.) |The Company will not expect such © | 110"; ‘Scag Catherwood's mother hap-| night,” tmplored Mr. Wadeworth, the tn. ast had~meant-this—dinner to bao. You didn't even Jaugh and I'm hungry} _., the-_Hunchakiet—Soct moye and thé ocean will be between tration standing out upon mis Wadsworth P Sack Hanley was going West|crust. Tho roast was hopelessly Un- ang tired and cross and a dinner at| ‘Formerly tench ak!et BoC eee eee eee berore they learn [pened tobe. within earshot. — perspiration _ i A yee mtb + Peeing andlatecwanted! bir! to derdone, and Jack liked his meat rare, Hylands"— | of N. Y.) beatareitoners “Who Is it? she inquired. She was| brow.) sWalt—wait unth tt When the crowd i. morning ana Miinner. In town. |And perhaps, after all, it might pass. / “Do you think we could make tt a, 7 So-1t ts understoo’ vou are | 14 gaya a hurried direction to the {ntormed. “Dear me,” sald Mise Catn-|night. Take time! a nave | ovetwhelined him, pb cial per nit tached as ahe even|She had forgotten to close the oven double event?” he pleaded. “My salary ‘Sbout to be married to Afiss Feridah | oo. cman and Jeaned back In his seat erwood's mother, “why, Mr, Anthony | Mise Catherwood, who would BAY) Atey ‘Cathermood, when i was all i t of the possibility of a propos-| door while she made the fresh pice and | will be raised for the new week and Pcdroelun. bor Her sinc we sivet | 2 oo ining ike a smile of relief Wadsworth has always appeared to me! preferred to end It at once, assen| eretss orew. ‘& sharp breath. (oe haneered for the question | the oven was hopelessly cold. Wee Gentnettap cub cra oarerterneta | TOuUmAy.wvaste (no) time 1a een ee ee pane to be a very proper young man,” Ghe said with al the coldness she could | ,_ "Te think, Tape, wale’ to heraelt, font ipRerswoart at reat. Nor| Tearfully whe murveyed the scarcely | von cen practise on me all you want.) ‘he checle a leva loins avila incuihel mara at the |e oer ene omer Ne Jaummon to her efd, that she would) oi ext night Mr. Anthony Wade . he the first. woman who had| steaming meat and wonderel {f she Will you say yes, dear?’ wWhat a funny letter!’ exciaimed ae eerare We re pees ) vy | turned Misa Catherwood, “he's too/ consider it; that sho would wait unt!! | worth called upon her. She met hima 2 to reach a man‘a heart through |would dare bring it to the table. Then liters pote acters of ner Mpa waa) Feridah. What?! 13 hf a t Hes ‘ 2 G Pee | proper. He's too conventional. Ho's| to-morrow night, And she had a rea-| at she, door. he was aaa - a . the bell ran ard with eyes still tear | {ar more eloaient tl poatne desnein Ba It is a death warran groaned He the carriage eet i ‘erida. oe & Ussue-paper man, won for it, She had an engagement; oontritely, your pardon,” het { it seemed as thougt the course ;stained she hurried to the door. {had been rated to bi pinnacle of hap- Petros T. feared it, but hoped I alight, @ messenger boy stepped up | air Anthony Wadsworth rose as she| with Tommy Bogga for the next nisnt;| “For what?’ she inquired. H b love-and the ddiner—waa not} Instead of Jack a blue-coated mes- | pinces—and nether will ever forget that might be overiooked. You spoke of | him. , ~_Jentered, and bowed in a quaint old-| and she intended to write « short note “You~you haven't forgotten,” he 2 trun smoothly. Martha,|senger stood there offering a note. It dinner, — [the Turka," he went on, noting his Mr, Alena?’ queried the youngster; | fashioned way. He was flustered and| for Mr, Wadsworth to receive when De Chereetiiet Bax Piorbsipeg ns Glave 4 ot * a cooked meals for the Waltors|was from Jack and he apologized ror = came, That would be tha.eng ef Mr lie 7 fait jet Vertad andy LC 24 es Walton married. had goe| hie rudeness. ‘I would not break. the Wadsworth. Sho aces joyously, “That,” ah oes sald, “ts the only part of your Th'wea he wrote, “but It ls to take dinner with Mr. Lane and may develop something that will entirely~ came Misty Watton —— TIMNES MY Diane: —I-wtttbe~over—ax ip, left alone, set about her tasks | soon as 1 can «et away.’ happy—heart imagining already | yesh a thankful heart Madge hurried Hitio kitchen where she showld|y 0." to he kitchen to make a: dinner| ress, Martha had left @ couple! om cones and bread and mashed po- to be baked and she had S°C)iatoes, and she san over her work Re he Sesh Dut when H_came-t0tei sc aied sip tie mews TaORe Taek the potatoes bhe found that thelosi6 tho evidence of her plunder w ad run out and she had to sP| sarely out of the way and she was things and run down to th@/watting in a trim own, On the way back Grace Malt-|° t7_ came in with glowing face, “I'm met her and she simply hadigorry to miss the splendid dinner,” he fin to see the new hat that Grace] cried as he took her hand. ‘I know ved for Christmas, Y've missed a treat, but tf you'll repeat B gho got back to the house the|the Invitation I'll come again. I'm not black and emoking, and with|coing away after all, That was what {dismay shedrew them from |r Lanewanted to see me about." __ pout making neW| “And you're golnx to stay hereT” she there was plsiity of-mince mestterted.-—"s - Inouse and soon two new, ples| ‘Just that.” he confirmed. “That was for baking, The roast was|worth even losing the best dinner that n too, and she set about get-|a cook ever prepared. I think you vegetables ready. might at least let me see what I otatoes were bouncing around | missed.” Boot when another of the girls| ‘You don't deserve It,” she declared. last night thet I had forgotten. tue a 1." a ‘ ne Down in the Fourteenth Ward in By R. V. Taylor. ‘palley's Hall Miss Catherwood and ay i | Tommy Boggs, a volsterous young MAN | swereg “that's CSntamat Nesoe Tw hoin she Wed. ware taving the Umey poltiow hay to-do thet Thats of their lUves, The campaign. was in questlonset) ‘went on. “There's some~ full blast—slection was near at and Te SS ed rag cess | MiasCatherwood kept her eyea on te} '‘T want to fies? ie Fi et wedding of a friend. Permis- been granted weeks ago and js well of the house before Hot Weather Horseplay. &2 &2 G&2 Ld WHY DON'T YOU RAISE ‘youR HAT WHEN YOU MEET A LADY? HEY! HURRY bP WITH MY LHAT! ve-egT- AN ENGACEMENT! speakers and listened to every word. Crhether—whether my—my girl ie poln) “Morray! hooray! hooray!” yelled the | to ,turn me down te If, Lc Eee ———fie boys are waiting for me. Miss Catherwood looked with the Bae cethecw nod ater | toward hine rest, and thon she gnve a little gMsD. | Jarre ae es. Hehe ae the compasy of For the man that the whole crowd wap|Anthony Wadsworth, Alderman.” Joking and yelling at was a young ——_—__.—_ man attired In a full-dress suit, Hoy tu iT was bowing, with conyentional stim; So! ution of the a Milkman’s Puzzle.’*! neas, right and left. And he was none i az “‘DMitkman‘s Possie” in yester< other than Mr. Anthony Wadsworth. day'a Evening Wort I's so! “To, Tony, Tony, Tony! yelled the crowd -'Phe—ohairman stepped for ‘Aa- follows: Let ua all ong —a2=.. ward, “Mr, Tony Wadsworth,’ he @x- | the ten-gallon eang A and tha other B, claimed, by way of introduction, and|and proceed ag follows to. show how! pandemonium broke loose. Mr. AD-/ the milkman supplied his two custem-! ers with two quarts each: thony Wadsworth steppeq forward & 21ll Mve-quart pall from ean A, Pour five-quart pail inte four-quer) pall. Exnpty_four-quart pati. TAN ON HE BEFORE | GET THAT. HAT. BACK! pace or two “Ain't he corkin’,"* eald the loquacious individual near Mise Catherwood, "and be always comes here in a awallow- tall ai knowa.what'a..what,..26 intooan A. Bin for a chat’ She had ber}—‘“Piease.” he BURRS “Even when doeu.” P rt pail” tnt 7 Evith her and insisted upon tak-| Adam and Eve were chased out our five-quart 0 four-quart ‘in ner Aoury_apronAtot | Garten of Ede! allowed Seranet tuscan ip omiene ones ReMi avecquart pall tromilean tA" consumed in fixing wp the| look over the fence.” < saath “Interrd—to~ be" here-toxnight;|— Pitt tourquert—pait~trom—ftve-quart— raeit! Madge's eyes began to flaw, “There he | exp tat pail. as Madgo aettled hersel foot is’ he wen: ‘Empty sean odvr filled the room and|Waan't any dinner,"" she confessed. gagemeat with my ain and she turned ‘ iponguast pal tom een Be hrieking to the kitchen, where| ‘Mother ani Maria are both away me down, I didn't have any other our eaeaaars pail into can A, which ¢ place to go and I. came here.” flls can A, Jeaving two guarts in four- t! id 1 wuch a horrid time. The jr had bolled off the potatoes. | an: ad ‘This, in black and white, amounts to| quart pail, Thus the oxi! ha; sup- eoimton = ed the photography and after),/es were sossy and the meat wouldn't nothing. But it was the wa that | plied . - $i each of his customers with ex- ad been scraped new potatoes | cook and—oh Jack—I'm an utter failure Wadsworth wala it that took. "“fia, ha, | rotly two quacte of milk, and apived his peeled and started, a8 @ cook." bal roarud the crowd ‘Smagine | perplexing problem, — a EES RSE Ao et ught f the Regi t Woos H H Li Wild Bacchante D 1 Tweive years Inter, as a corporal, he wins) worn, dust-covered, weary from toll and ing stem, Cigarette. danced with the]danced; her gros bebees were not, liant array of military deserts than his, ;teprimand, a volley ef insolent oppro-| fresh nerve her ithe . it mad. t ato. @ 1 die notice of Cigarctte, the beautiful. daring | atift with wounds, she would do It, till jwild grace of an Almeh, of @Hayadere| enough for her, She wanted s chas-| Yet, for many yeara he had been passed | brium burled at himself, under which | ber éyes flash like so muoh fre, it gave 4 and jovable, tho darlin of the army they forgot their {lls, and got as in-/of a Nautch girl, as untutored and {n-'seur with white hands and a gravel by unnoticed: he had now not even the!he had had to sit mute in his saddle, her pulllion 204 more Prins er Two Flags Sed tact pteaurone wae inanes the Mar toxicated with it as with champagne |atinctive In her “as its song to © bird, | smile to admire her dancing. cross on his chest, and he had only{with no other sign that he was buman | and Gesinvolture, he stamps ‘ : @ burden, For her gros beebees, if they were jas its swiftness to-chamols. To seo Cig-| But this same Chassour was paying | slowly and with infinite dimculty been| beneath the outrage than the blood that her day, wpurred rece fed i By Ouida — — really jn want of It, ahe would do any-{arette was like drinking light, flery | ycant Peed tal hendustnow, rlteileaued' promoted les iar fant he! aloodll nowera |fwould, despite shlmsslt)iriughiithe pala pemeaver ares tect ehey ried And 8a i { hf - CHAPTER X. thing. She would flout a star-covered | wines, whose Intoxication wis gay 88! there musing and sravo, hearing littie|corporal in tho Chasseurs d'Afrique—a | bronze of his forehead. His thoughts|she pun. she bounded, she seemed to j z general, box the ears of a brilliant ald, |tmlechief, and sparkling as themseives.|o¢ the noise about him step only Just socorded him’ because | were on it now. live tn als, while her ott cura lew Pan neseal iacnreral@onay A Woman’s Rage. fond killing missiles ot sinner RUA dandy | All. thev warmth of Africa, alt the Wit] sev years before, when ne had] Wounds Inausierable ang distinctions) “There are many toneen thet are DMt-| glanced and her gheeka riowed with and refuse | of Franca, all tho bohemlanism of the} without number in countless rkirmishes| ter enough,” he mused; “but there js ww, and the ttle gold alg- inn of the darricre swung italof a rogiment de famill Re ee ere ieatertictne vereind : : ‘RECEDING CHAPTERS. A sign of the As du Pique, where | point-blank a Russian grand duke; but| Flag, all the caprices of her sex, wore | Poem ordered, into exerts Rrowms (had made {t Impossible to: cast him|not one so bitter as the loes of the right | {2 @ acroms her chest with thy ing. axtravagant, offt- the feathery palms once had way-/to ‘mes enfana” (my children), as she|{n that bewitching dancing, Flashing, | pnas nts ae heiere Sfaenas ee erollyaanldelanvaiones Asiteeent el beating of her heart that throbbed ke is fot we Viscount, Reval | ot nove monques of showy gleam, with|was given to calling tstouwh Users |Muttaring, circling, whirling, glancing U0 He WAR made fm TMallicts Ute) Ther ine hen implacasl ‘A whirlwind of laughter, 80 loud that | first breath of spring. : “d0-woil Wha 1d! marble domes and joweled arabesiues, | and grisly yeterana of tho Army of lenbre's!eledincmtosslnerlka (a | atened tim | withe Ama zed) 3.08 Ee Fe eee Re ee eis inea | ay ie of the abrill vic-|, 5h@,had nitted hgrseit axainst him; Pet ereeee and the hush of prayer under columned | Africa; Clgaretto was hever capricious, Meade Leundiv® like un antes; tering Co himself, “What a rider! Dieulmity of one man—his chiet, “Black ||t drowned the utile of hie & an | grauherworennts a Heraph’). Berke ; pinay feunchtn: a | do Dieu! he knows more than we can| Hawk," the ‘Marquia of Chateauroy, | lina and thundering dnums, echoed! ‘he vivacity, the tinpetugalty, | the Be erpeteeek | alates, however mischievously she woutd rally, | ‘ope hing Jike an arrow, darting ; hia ar 1 ahoek hice rons | an taline klseandes) the: VoIDAtNGaikeptes oat a usuret, | It was @ low-roofed, white plastered, jor contemptuously would rate them, |e @ falcon, skimming like a swallow; Jteach! Ho han served betora now-—| Far-sundered as they were by post-| through te rg os and ah ri real ea ML beet a reps (2 MM BT caudily docked, amoke-dried mimicry of | when they deserved It then for an instant resting aatndolently, | served In soma — emperor kad] {ion, and rarely aa they oowld come tr) his reverie. nt Clanratte, with «| eperklink movement Of |b the Jans beyond Parts, Where the| And she was dancing for them now. | as langulily. volupuouely, ag a) BUard! | Actual contact, that merciions wotght of| 4 /OP-hel) MGnmth Ga wna noted. his nig even, und fed ¢ Hae ne uecialorm and women stood | dar soft etiort cutie ali uttering, hor |watercilly festa on the water's breast--|| And when ho had passed from the) animosity from the kreat man to his) abetragted Rat. | You ate looking at Lees RUE ane e Niet aati back to leave her a cleat place, Cig-|chedks all bright with a asdariet flush, | Cigarette en Bacchante no man could | exercising ground to the campalgn the] soldier had lid on the othr like fron, pata paeney Neyo! ne? © will days he bad watch the fantass. | arette was dancing alone. her eyes as black as night, and full of | tesist. / i | army iff found tn jilm one of the most|and clogged him from all advancement. | *Si 0 Van" Ingult she hed never been witcherles oF Raalsrn. als. and the ¢ Marshals had more than once ¢e-|tire, her gay little uniform, with its| | And évery now aad then her ntl eplend!d of its many splendid soldiers:| His thoughta were of It now, Only to-| subjected to from the Orat day wher Hae eG icpacr } sayod to bribe thé tarmous little FHend | scarlet aad purple, mallng her look Uke | eyes would Nash over the ring of fa-| aid In the records there was no page| day, at an inspection, the acofdentaily | she bed danced for eweaimests, on the 2 At the Pike te dance tor them, end had! fuchsla bell tosaed by the wind to and | miller faces, and glands from them with | of adhlevement, of exploits, of services, | broken saddle girth of @ boy conscript thfes etre ol. 1a) Boe guide afin re fawn ea i fies. falled; but, for a set ef soldiers, war- tro; ever vo lightly, on its delloate eway- an impatient disappointment as she ef dancers, that showed a more bril-'had turniakes pretext_2er a farious . of 7 ¢ Continued.) 43 ? y Mi 4 4 5 sae eisai daca lghoter

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